Low technology on tap to explore gulf's secrets


Low technology on tap to explore gulf's secrets

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PANAMA CITY, Fla. — Scientists will use advanced technology never before deployed beneath the sea as they try to discover new creatures, behaviors and phenomena in a 10-day expedition to the


Gulf of Mexico’s deepest reaches. An international team of 16 scientists embarks today on the $210,000 mission, called Operation Deep Scope. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric


Administration is paying for the expedition through a grant to the Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution of Fort Pierce, Fla. “Scientists will head first for DeSoto Canyon, about 120 miles


south of Pensacola, with a mini-submarine aboard a research vessel to visit recently detected pinnacles about 2,700 feet below the surface. The expedition also will use a combination of new


devices, including a stealthy camera system that can be left on the bottom for 24 hours at a time to photograph sea creatures under low levels of infrared light invisible to the animals.


Edith Widder, the expedition’s co-leader and a senior scientist at Harbor Branch, said it will “allow us to see without being seen.” Until now, scientists had limited options for observing


deep-sea life. “We have to drag nets through the water to bring the animals up to us, or we go down with these big, bright, noisy submersibles or remote-operated vehicles, which any animal


with any kind of sensory system -- and any sense -- is going to get away from,” Widder said. Scientists have never seen a living example of one elusive deep-sea creature, the giant squid,


but they know it exists because dead squids have floated to the surface. Dispatches will be posted on the Web at https://www.at-sea.org. Articles and lesson plans for teachers are at


https://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov. MORE TO READ