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Submersible ops are suspended July 7 for scheduled maintenance of the DeepWorkers. We anchor offshore from the Monterey Bay Aquarium, and Steve Webster and the aquariums aquatic residents dazzle the McArthur crew during a rare behind-the-scenes tour. Acknowledged by directors of other aquariums to be the best in the world, ever, the recently assembled exhibits on deep sea life are especially appealing. Heretofore, only a few people in deep diving submersibles have had the joy of personal face-to-face encounters with the deep oceans living jewels. Now, children, teachers, moms and dads, anyone, everyone can peer into the face of a spectacular spidery-legged crab or watch luminous rainbows pulse along the sides of a deep-dwelling comb jelly.
But here I am on my own, not operating a cabled vehicle from the comfort of a warm, dry cabin on a ship; rather, I am inside a warm, dry vehicle that protects me from the pressure and cold and delivers an atmosphere scrubbed of carbon dioxide, rich in oxygen. I am alone, but hardly lonely. Thousands of creatures are just outside DeepWorkers clear dome; descending into the canyon is like diving into jelly and crustacean soup. At 400 feet [122 meters], I am immersed in a cloud of krill and they continue to be companions to 900 feet [274 meters], and are there replaced by red-splashed sergestid shrimp that appear to be skiiing on their improbably-long antennae. And there, among exotic-looking basketstars and crinoids, glistening anemones and craggy-browed rockfish I find what I find on every dive Ive made in the past 20 yearstrash. First a beer can. Then a tangled wad of monofilament line. A bright orange rainjacket, plastered with anemones and sheltering several large prawns. Another can. And then, looming like a superhighway across the sea floor, the unmistakable track of a fishing trawl. Sylvia A. Earle [Note: nationalgeographic.com does not research or copyedit dispatches.]
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