Exploring the Arctic Seafloor
- By David Levin & Peter Tyson
- Posted 06.01.09
- NOVA scienceNOW
Imagine being the first person ever to lay eyes on a remote landscape or to discover life-forms that no one knew existed. That was the case on a 2007 expedition to the Gakkel Ridge, one of the mid-ocean ridges that ring the globe like stitches on a baseball. Here, see first-ever photos and video from the bottom of the top of the world and experience that "first-ever" sensation for yourself.
See some of the first imagery ever shot on the Arctic Ocean seabed—and what it's telling us about living at ext...
Credits
Image and Video Credits
- (map)
- © WGBH Educational Foundation
- (Oden breaking ice, CAMPER, PUMA)
- © Chris Linder, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
- (sea sponge, yellow bacteria mat, pyroclastic debris, cirrate octopus video, video of unidentified fauna at a hydrothermal vent, deep-sea shrimp video)
- © Advanced Imaging and Visualization Laboratory, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
- (Oden in ice floes video, helicopter scouting video, Oden time lapse video, rescuing PUMA video)
- © Devin Ruddick, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Related Links
-
Mystery of the Gakkel Ridge
Scientists journeying deep beneath Arctic sea ice discover a world never before seen.
-
Gakkel Ridge: Expert Q&A
Marine ecologist Tim Shank answers questions about the Gakkel Ridge, the 2007 Woods Hole expedition, and more.
-
Glowing in the Dark
See a menagerie of bizarre ocean organisms that use bioluminescent light to lure prey, mate, and more.
-
Exploring the Arctic Seafloor
Learn what some of the first imagery ever shot on the Arctic Ocean seabed tells us about life in extreme environments.
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