If you had the chance to experience both wouldja?
Sunlight can only reach a few hundred feet down into the ocean, and below that is completely dark. The water is not as clear as you might think, either, but contains a lot of fine sediment - a lot of it is fish poo! - slowly setting to the bottom. That helps to scatter the light from the flood-lamps, reducing their range.
From what little I know about them, the only submarines that give you a first-hand knowledge of being underwater are the small research ones with viewing-ports. I think there are some tourist versions too, that take you on trips in fairly shallow waters close inshore or along coral reefs. The nearest I've been to anything like that was a glass-bottomed boat operating near my home. Naval submarines are not noted for luxury, but the modern ones have comfortable mess-rooms that give the crew a bit of off-duty respite from working inside a big steel tube crammed with machinery and electronics.
I read once that because there is nowhere inside one of those giving a field of view more than maybe a hundred feet at most, crew-members on long-duration patrols tend to lose some sense of distance. So on coming ashore they are advised not to drive for a few days, to become accustomed to judging distances again.
The extinct species that are known, have left traces like fossils or bones, or are ones that have died out within human history so were recorded. Most of those recent ones were wiped out by humans, like the dodo. New species still come to light though, as fossils not previously found. Occasionally, thanks to better techniques and accumulating knowledge, fossils are re-identified as "new", not the genus or species originally thought.
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Virus-wise... Still OK thank you. I have my first vaccination tomorrow! Happy Tuesday to you too. And it even is Tuesday - I don't come on AnswerMug everyday day.