Last leg of extensive research mission begins September 6
Today, the NOAA Ship Okeanos Explorer is embarking on the last leg of NOAA’s three-year mission to explore the deep Pacific Ocean when it heads to the Musicians Seamounts and the Hawaiian Islands.
Starting September 7, you, too, can join the expedition virtually by following the live video streamed by a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) diving down to the seafloor near Musicians Seamounts. Dives will continue through September 29, usually between 2:00 p.m.–12:00 a.m. Eastern, depending on weather and ocean conditions.
As the Okeanos sets out on its final research leg of this mission, we invite you to take a photo and video journey through the 10 greatest sightings – to date – made during NOAA’s CAPSTONE mission, a multiyear effort to collect baseline information to support science and management decisions in and around U.S. marine protected areas in the central and western Pacific.
And now, the Top 10 sightings from NOAA’s CAPSTONE mission:
1. The largest sponge known in the world
2. A potential new species of octopod
3. Sighting of a Crossota jellyfish
4. The first live sighting of ghost-like fish
5. An underwater vent gushing metal particles
6. A first look at historic Japanese mini-submarines near Pearl Harbor, Hawaii
7. Maps of hundreds of thousands of square kilometers of seafloor
8. A fierce battle between a shrimp and a dragonfish
9. A rare sighting of brittle stars capturing a swimming squid
10. A fascinating journey through a new frontier