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Ralphie
09-19-2006, 12:19 PM
My Journey to the Bottom of the Sea

Hi All. I know I don’t post often but GC told me that some of you would like to hear about my submarine adventures over the last month so I thought I’d post this summary of my journey to the bottom of the sea. So I sailed on the Research Vessel Atlantis which is the mother ship of the submarine Alvin. Our expedition was to the what’s called the Juan de Fuca Ridge System about 200-300 miles off the coasts of the state of Washington and Canada. The Juan de Fuca plate is one of the smallest of the Earth’s plates sandwiched in between the much larger North American and Pacific plates. Where the plates come together and spread apart, you find areas of hydrothermal vents/volcanic activity and it is here where lots of interesting and amazing animals dwell. The purpose of our expedition was to explore some of the hydrothermal vents at the Juan de Fuca plate and to bring some of the animals and bacteria that live there back to the ship to study them in the lab. Alvin is one of just a handful of submarines that can dive to some of the deepest parts of the ocean. (It can go as deep as 4,500 meters or 14,764 feet). It’s a small submarine. It only holds three people, 1 pilot and 2 scientists. The original submarine was built back in 1964 but it has all new parts now. It consists of a titanium sphere surrounded by lots of hydraulics and robotic controls that the pilot can use to deploy scientific equipment and collect samples. I got to experience my first dive and it was fantastic! It was dive 4240 and took place on Sept. 5, 2006. We dove to a depth of 2,276 meters, almost 1.5 miles below the surface. I was very excited in the days leading up to the dive. We first received an orientation telling us about what its like to dive in Alvin. It takes 1.5-2 hours to get to the bottom and about 2 hours to get back. You have about 4 hours to actually explore once you get to the bottom. The sub can only actively stay down for about 8-10 hours. It actually runs off of golf cart batteries! The sphere is really tiny, imagine about the size of the inside of a VW Bug. There are also three viewing holes for each person to look through, each about the size of a small plate. There are also lots of cameras hooked up to computer monitors for us to view what’s going on outside the sub. Before the dive they tell you what to do in case of an emergency. For example, if the pilot is unconscious, there is enough oxygen to last 3 days. During those three days you are supposed to read a manual, kept inside the sub, and learn to operate the sub yourself. I’m not joking. The sub is owned by the Navy, so you can imagine how thick the manual is. Most of the critical info starts at page 57, but you have 3 days! The actual dive was great. Once you get below 1000ft the light from the sun completely disappears. But it is not dark. The are thousands of small lights being made by tiny animals and algae that live in the water column, small jelly fish, shrimps and fish that are what’s called bioluminescent, meaning they can make light. It was one of the most amazing sights I’ve ever seen observing this symphony of lights that was being played before me. As we descended the pilot talks to the ship using a hydrophone. It transmits the speakers voice using sound waves through the water. The receiving end hears an other-worldly aqua-man-like voice on the other end. It was really cool. The sub uses sonar to judge how close it’s getting to the bottom. The last thing you want to do is hit the bottom too hard or come down on top of an active volcanic chimney! As we got closer we watched out of the viewing holes for the bottom. Finally we saw it. We had landed about half a kilometer from the vents on what looked like another planet. Large rolling fields of jumbled rocks. It was very dark and there were a few odd animals like barrel sponges, large spider crabs and long, white eel-looking albino fish swimming near by. It was an alien and lonely looking sight. These animals spend their entire lives in the dark, never encountering light, except for the very few human visitors who wander into their world. We had landed in what’s called the Mothra field (in honor of Godzilla) and were interested in visiting a series of vent chimneys called the Faulty Towers Complex. We had coordinates to Faulty Towers and started off in that direction. As we approached the vents, the terrain changed dramatically. You could see signs of life sprouting up as we got closer, lots of crabs and small clumps of tube worms. Then we saw it. An amazing series of chimneys, covered with life and actively spewing what looked like thick clouds of black smoke. It was an amazing sight and one that I’ll never forget! Here in the cold depths of the ocean, surrounded by what can best be described as a desert, was an oasis, a Garden of Eden, teeming with life. There were thousands of bright red tube-worms, crabs, snails, worms and fish. Unlike the rest of life on this planet, these animals live off the energy released from the center of the Earth and not the energy of the Sun. We spent several hours exploring this amazing environment, deploying instruments to analyze the chemistry of the vent water and collecting critters to bring back to the ship to study. All-in-all it was an amazing experience and one I hope I'll be able to do again in the future. I wish you could all have been there to see it!

Ralphie

CoasterMatt
09-19-2006, 12:23 PM
I am so insanely jealous at this moment...

Gemini Cricket
09-19-2006, 12:31 PM
I find it totally amazing. :)

Nice post!

SacTown Chronic
09-19-2006, 12:34 PM
I hate paragraphs too.

The boards are doomed!

Amazing adventure.:snap:

katiesue
09-19-2006, 12:46 PM
Amazing. Printing this out for my munchkin, it's her second choice of career after "Famous Country Singer".

DreadPirateRoberts
09-19-2006, 12:55 PM
Great post!


We had coordinates to Faulty Towers and started off in that direction.

How did you navigate? GPS doesn't work down there. Does Alvin have inertial navigation?

Do you know have any idea of the water temp (both at the vents and away from them)?


What a great experience!

CoasterMatt
09-19-2006, 01:06 PM
Where are Simon and Theodore? :D

Snowflake
09-19-2006, 01:21 PM
Welcome Ralphie! :cool:

Awesome adventure! Thanks for posting, please do it often!

lashbear
09-19-2006, 01:22 PM
WOW !!! Did you find "The Heart Of The Sea" ? ;)

Lucky Duck.

Ghoulish Delight
09-19-2006, 01:31 PM
I'm jealous of anyone who gets to "deploy scientific equipment". :cool:

That all sounds indescribably cool, what an amazing adventure.

Speaking of you and submarines, I wondered to myself if you were acquainted with Chris Grech from MBARI. He was featured on NPR in a piece about the exploration of the wreck of the USS Macon (a derrigible that had to ditch in the ocean in 1935) and I heard "Monterey Bay Aquarium" and thought of you.

Disneyphile
09-19-2006, 03:41 PM
Oh, how awesome!! I loved the recap - it's like I could see it for myself for a few moments. :)

Although, I have to ask a not-so-subtle question, because my curiosity is picqued: What do you do if you have to go to the bathroom? It's not like you can just pull over to an underwater bush or something. :blush:

Matterhorn Fan
09-19-2006, 03:56 PM
Cool.

tracilicious
09-19-2006, 04:07 PM
Wow! How incredible. Were you scared? What if the battery died? Did it occur to you that the fish and creatures you saw might have thought they encountered god? :p

RStar
09-19-2006, 04:26 PM
My Journey to the Bottom of the Sea

Hi All. I know I don’t post often

Like 3 times...

But that's ok, we got to know you through osmosis.;)

That sounds like a really cool trip! Thanks for letting us know!!

But, I need to ask. Did you have to pee?

:D

Babette
09-19-2006, 04:31 PM
WOW! So very awesome! Thanks for sharing. :)

Not Afraid
09-19-2006, 06:48 PM
WOW! What a GREAT adventure! Thank you so much for sharing your account with us. I feel like I have a inty tiny bit of understanding of what you saw down there, thanks to the fun tour you gave us at Harvard.

So, how many new "we don't know what those are" did you bring back?

€uroMeinke
09-19-2006, 06:51 PM
Pictures! Surely you must have sanpped a few?

What a great sea-faring adventure and a great tale for such a swashbuckling day.

Bornieo: Fully Loaded
09-19-2006, 07:01 PM
Thanks for the report Ralphie. Just amazing stuff and a great opportunity.


Wonderful!!

BarTopDancer
09-19-2006, 09:48 PM
Amazing. Thank you so much for sharing.

Snowflake
09-19-2006, 09:55 PM
A few law firms back, these guys were clients and these toys (http://www.biotoy.com/blaster.htm) were very cool!

Just another gift from the sea!

RStar
09-19-2006, 11:31 PM
A few law firms back, these guys were clients and these toys (http://www.biotoy.com/blaster.htm) were very cool!

Just another gift from the sea!
Cool! Lets kill a massive amount of sea creatures to extract their bioelumenessence to sell squirt guns for $4.99!

Oh wait. They're sold out. I guess they killed them all. Ooops....

Gemini Cricket
09-20-2006, 04:15 AM
We do have pictures. I'll try to help post them. But you know me and technology.

The pics are neat.
:)

Snowflake
09-20-2006, 05:40 AM
Cool! Lets kill a massive amount of sea creatures to extract their bioelumenessence to sell squirt guns for $4.99!

Oh wait. They're sold out. I guess they killed them all. Ooops....

Well, yeah, you're right. Silly me, I did think these were cool, sorry bout the crappy insensitive post. :(

Ralphie
09-20-2006, 09:05 AM
Thanks for all of the interest! To answer a few of the questions you had.
Sometimes you do have to go down there and there are no bathrooms. Instead they issue you a pee bottle. You have to be really comfortable with the people you're diving with because there's not much room. Many people, including myself, hold it so I didn't have to use it!
The way we navigated the sub was by using a compass as well as homing devices that have been placed down there to give the pilot a sense of direction. Also, the mothership has GPS and can "beam" us down coordinates.
I will definitely try and post some pics soon!

RStar
09-20-2006, 01:38 PM
Cool! We want pics!

Thanks Ralphie!

MouseWife
09-20-2006, 01:58 PM
Many people, including myself, hold it so I didn't have to use it!


Ohhhh, yes, that would be me, too. Long road trips {or in your case, undersea trips ;)} would have me passing the coffee and many bottles of water....I've seen way too many rest areas, etc. that I might choose a 'pee bottle' over. Blech!

Can't wait for the pictures!