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charleston bump
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Charleston Bump
Ocean Exploration
Charleston Bump Expedition. A 3-D image of the Charleston Bump. This featurewas first discovered by John Maffitt of the United States Coast Survey in1853.
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Charleston Bump Expedition. This little gooseneck barnacle lives onlyon crab carapaces.
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Charleston Bump Expedition. Isopod eyes showing structure similar to fly eyes. This parasitic crustacean (isopod) sometimes attaches to the foreheads offish. Photo MVC-021F.
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Charleston Bump Expedition. Image of a larval crab taken through a microscope.
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Charleston Bump Expedition. Image of a larval shrimp taken through a microscope.
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Charleston Bump Expedition. Closeup image of a species of crinoid.
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Charleston Bump Expedition. A curly worm. This beautiful orange segmented worm,A Syllid (related to earthworms), has long white appendages calleddorsal cirri on every segment. They curled in and out from its bodylike the paper party favors that child
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Charleston Bump Expedition. Jerry McLelland, a professor at the University ofSouthern Mississippi, reaches into the pipe dredge to extract a sample. This was the first successful use of the pipe dredge, custom-built for the CharlestonBump expedition.
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Charleston Bump Expedition. Currents caused as result of Gulf Streamencountering the Charleston Bump and perturbing flow.The Charleston Bump complex causes the Gulf Stream to speed up and be deflectedoffshore. Even when the weather is beautiful, wate
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Charleston Bump Expedition. With rope in hand, sub crew member Jim Sullivandives from the R/V Seward Johnson to hook the resurfaced submersibleDue to the ripping Gulf Stream current, his timing had to be perfect.
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Charleston Bump Expedition. South Carolina Department of Natural ResourcesFish Biologist Dave Wyanski prepares to enter the JSL II sphereprior to launching for for Dive #3407.
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Charleston Bump Expedition. Conducting CTD (conductivity, temperature, depth)operations in the Charleston Bump area.Just before midnight, Fred Andrus, helps to lower the 2400 lb CTD over theship's starboard side.
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Charleston Bump Expedition. Finding good use for downtime, Leslie Sautter,director of Project Oceanica, pulls together expedition-relatededucational products to be posted on the oceanica.cofc.edu Web site.
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Charleston Bump Expedition. Dive 3406. Porpita porpita. Not really ajellyfish but a hydroid made up of individual zooids.
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Charleston Bump Expedition. Dive 3406. Sipunculid worm.See image expl0342.
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Charleston Bump Expedition. Dive 3406. Brittlestar
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Charleston Bump Expedition. Dive 3406. Coral branch
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Charleston Bump Expedition. Marine worm
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Charleston Bump Expedition. Beautiful coral branch.
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Charleston Bump Expedition. Surprising small dimensions of coral branch inimage expl0141 .
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