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Sponsored by the University of Delaware College of Marine and Earth Studies, WHYY TV, and the National Science Foundation

Check out these videos and photos,
which have been transmitted to the
University of Delaware from the R/V Atlantis
through the efforts of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
Be sure to also visit Woods Hole’s Dive and Discover Web site.

A pink, spiny spider crab, similar to the two that have already been sampled, looks warily at Alvin’s manipulator as it takes a push core. This crab was not collected. Sampling hot, 300°C hydrothermal fluid from Rebecca’s Roost vent in the Guaymas Basin’s southern trough. The bottle is made from titanium, so it is very strong and does not react with the hot corrosive fluids coming out of the vent. Chemists take the samples and analyze the fluid to determine its chemical composition. A view of the bacterial mats at Kristin’s Summit vent showing the marker left for future cruises and the placement of Josh Simpson’s “planets” in a blanket of bacteria surrounded by tubeworms.

Today’s Photo Gallery


A beautiful sunrise over a flat, calm sea was the setting for the launch of Alvin for its final dive of the cruise.





Alvin is launched just as the sun is rising at about 07:00 hours — an early start so that we can get into Manzanillo on time.





Some of the styrofoam coffee cups that have been “shrunk” by going down to the bottom of the ocean on Alvin. The last dive always has an extra-full cargo of these cups. A few hundred cups are “shrunk” on every Alvin cruise.





One of Josh Simpson's “planets” that was taken down to the seafloor on today’s dive, Alvin 3523. It is sitting on a bathymetric map that shows the depth of the Guaymas Basin where it will reside.





The “planet” sitting on the biobox in Alvin’s basket waiting to be secured for the trip down to the seafloor. In the background, there are sediment corers and the Analytical Instrument Systems, Inc. (AIS) electrochemical analyzer.





The crew of R/V Atlantis use a grappling hook to retrieve one of the acoustic transponders that Alvin uses to navigate when on the seafloor. These beeper devices were put down at the beginning of the cruise, and once all the dives are finished, an acoustic signal is sent down to them, they release their anchors, and then float up to the surface, where they can be collected.





Alvin’s manipulator collects fluids in a gas-tight sampler from the hot water trapped under a ledge (or flange). Tubeworms are growing on the top of the sulfide ledge.





The final recovery of Alvin was made in mirror-like seas — a perfect end to an exciting dive series.





A fiery red sunset over Baja California as we head for Manzanillo, Mexico.