Underwater mountains could be discovered thanks to $3 BILLION project to map ...

Using data collected from underwater drones, merchant ships, fishing boats and even explorers, a new scientific project aims to map the ocean floor by 2030 and solve one of the world's enduring mysteries.

With73 million square miles of water - or about 93 percent of the world's oceans with a depth of over 200 metres - yet to be charted, the initiative is ambitious.

Satinder Bindra, director of the Seabed 2030 project, said the work can be completed within the period and will shed light on everything from tsunami wave patterns to pollution, fishing movements, shipping navigation and unknown mineral deposits.

'We know more about the surface of the Moon and Mars than our own backyard. This in the 21st century is something that we are working to correct,' Bindra told Reuters.

'For too long now we have treated our own oceans as a forgotten frontier.'

The project is a collaboration between Japan's philanthropic Nippon Foundation and GEBCO, a non-profit association of experts that is already involved in charting the ocean floor. GEBCO operates under the International Hydrographic Organization and UNESCO, the United Nations cultural agency.

Authorities combing through the Indian Ocean for remains of missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 have discovered two huge structures (pictured) on the sea floor

The search for Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 has contributed more than 65,000 square kilometers of data

'We are not driven by profit, we are driven by science,' Bindra said.

'There's unanimity within the scientific and the mapping community that a map is essential.'

Still, the ocean economy is expected directly to contribute $3 trillion to the

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