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Profile
Name
The Curious Current
Description
Welcome to The Curious Current!
My name is Ned and I’ve been exploring the ocean since I was 13, when I first strapped on a scuba tank and dropped beneath the waves. I’m now a NAUI Divemaster who’s dived in all five oceans across all seven continents—but my journey really began the day I met an octopus in the Caribbean. It watched me with the same curiosity I felt for it, and in that moment, I was hooked.
Since then, I’ve chased that sense of wonder everywhere the sea can take me, from icy polar waters to the warm, colorful reefs of the tropics. I hold a BA in Archaeology and Master’s degree in Sustainability Management, and I’m deeply passionate about human history and protecting the aquatic world and the creatures that call it home.
Through The Curious Current, I share the stories, science, and hidden marvels of the ocean, not just to educate, but to inspire curiosity and respect for the blue planet we all depend on.
Stay Curious, Stay Current.
— Ned
My name is Ned and I’ve been exploring the ocean since I was 13, when I first strapped on a scuba tank and dropped beneath the waves. I’m now a NAUI Divemaster who’s dived in all five oceans across all seven continents—but my journey really began the day I met an octopus in the Caribbean. It watched me with the same curiosity I felt for it, and in that moment, I was hooked.
Since then, I’ve chased that sense of wonder everywhere the sea can take me, from icy polar waters to the warm, colorful reefs of the tropics. I hold a BA in Archaeology and Master’s degree in Sustainability Management, and I’m deeply passionate about human history and protecting the aquatic world and the creatures that call it home.
Through The Curious Current, I share the stories, science, and hidden marvels of the ocean, not just to educate, but to inspire curiosity and respect for the blue planet we all depend on.
Stay Curious, Stay Current.
— Ned
Subscribers
5.53K
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Recent Activity
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The Curious Current
There are stone walls sitting on the bottom of Lake Titicaca that were built on dry land. The lake moved. The walls didn't. New video up — we go into what's actually down there, why diving it is one of the hardest things happening in South American archaeology right now, and what it tells us about a civilization that was adapting to a shifting landscape for centuries before it disappeared from view. Click below!
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The Curious Current
New compilation video of my favorite, most puzzling underwater anomalies is now live! These natural formations are very odd, and I love the potential mystery surrounding each. Let me know which is the most interesting to you!
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The Curious Current
Have you ever heard of the "Bimini Road"? It's a bizarre submerged formation in the Bahamas. New video is up now - check it out!
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The Curious Current
There’s a “road” underwater near the Bahamas that looks almost engineered.
Flat stone blocks. Long, continuous lines. Even what looks like stacking.
People have been connecting it to Atlantis for decades.
But the explanation is… not what you expect.
Would you assume this was man-made if you saw it diving?
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Friends
Channel Comments
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the.curious.current
(5 months ago)
Would you dive into one of these?
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KenFishin
(5 months ago)
There is a perfectly preserved skeleton inside all of us.
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InSpaaaaaaace
(5 months ago)
I am so glad that I have no urge to climb mountains, jump out of planes, dive into caves...
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uncagedspirit
(5 months ago)
Being from The Bahamas, I am thankful for those brave souls that explore our blue holes unraveling pieces of our history but even more thankful it isn't me.
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susanparotti5187
(5 months ago)
I'm from Abaco. I know 3 people who died in the blue holes here. Young and inexperienced divers get lost in the caverns and that's that for them. My husband is a very experienced diver and worked for the police to retrieve bodies.
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jaymac7203
(5 months ago)
These oxygen free time capsules must be amazing for scientists to study. Just imagine the amount of different well preserved finds to come across? Not only bones but maybe artifacts too.
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grandpahickory613
(5 months ago)
I would not go in there for anything !
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geekyprojects1353
(5 months ago)
In one sinkhole in the Bahamas they even found a perfectly preserved skeleton in a dive suit.
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girthgames6562
(5 months ago)
Diving in itself is very scary for some people. I've watched people panic in swimming pools during certification training. Now imagine at these depths in complete darkness
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mollydooker9636
(5 months ago)
That's a hell no from me....those things are terrifying.
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MatthewLawlor-p4b
(5 months ago)
They look amazing but they certainly do have a strange vibe about them.
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dwaynekoblitz6032
(5 months ago)
The BALLS it would take to dive into those holes?!?! Not I!! Even though it's damn cool down there.
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jamesb.armstrong5433
(5 months ago)
No way in the world would I dive inro Hydrogen Sulfide.
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AbuPeterstau
(5 months ago)
Fascinating information. There is a blue hole close to where I live in Florida. I’m not sure if I would be brave enough to explore it like this though.
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WilfredoMendez1
(5 months ago (edited))
3:57 His bone was quite preserved.
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willthebeast8002
(5 months ago)
Brave/Curious/Crazy.
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