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Subsurface view of Deep Rover and surface view of Alucia from Nadir.

Subsurface view of Deep Rover and surface view of Alucia from Nadir.
Subsurface view of Deep Rover and surface view of Alucia from Nadir.
Subsurface view of Deep Rover and surface view of Alucia from  Nadir.
Subsurface view of Deep Rover and surface view of Alucia from  Nadir.
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252231
Pineda, Jesùs
Subsurface view of Deep Rover and surface view of Alucia from Nadir.
Still Image
04/14/2015
graphics/Pineda_Alucia/DSC05956.JPG
Image Of the Day caption:
Researchers Jesús Pineda and Vicke Starczak had a front-row view in April 2015 as DSV Rover (pictured) and DSV Nadir descended from the research vessel Alucia to Hannibal Seamount in the Panamanian Pacific. At about 9 miles long, the underwater feature rises from the seafloor 1,400 feet below, peaking at 130 feet beneath the waters surface. Shallow banks and seamounts often serve as a gathering place for underwater life and the goal of the research cruise was to investigate the distribution of bottom organisms (such as crabs, sea urchins, and corals) at different depth layers of the seamount, Pineda said.
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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