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Voyage To Inner Space
Unidentified sargassum shrimp bearing two colors of fluorescent patches.
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The exuberant science crew watching video footage of the chain cat shark.
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Zooanthid polyps under fluorescent light setting (this is the blue image)and under white light.
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Zooanthid polyps under fluorescent light setting under blue light.
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Dr. Mikhail Matz checking his yellow submersible light filters prior to launch.
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Scientists Justin Marshall and Tammy Frank holding one of thedisgusting hagfish captured in Dr. Frank's trap
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Green fluorescing eyebrow of a 5 cm. frogfish collected at 1,800 ft. deep.
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Planktonic copepod, most likely Microsetella sp., with green and yellowfluorescence.
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Profile of the head of the pontellid copepod Pontella securifer. Light passessequentially through 3 separate lenses and then hits the photoreceptor cells.This male copepod has one antenna that is bright orange and modified for grabbing females, while
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The lobate ctenophore Ocyropsis maculata as viewed under polarized light.
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The lobate ctenophore Ocyropsis maculata as viewed under unpolarized light
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Deep-sea shrimp. UL shows full color image. The other three panels show howthe shrimp appears under blue, green, and red light. Unlike what was seen atshallower depths, this animal is not most camouflaged at natural bluewavelengths. Instead it actual
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Yellow zooanthids on a glass sponge. Note that, though highly conspicuous underfull light, they blend in with the sponge at blue wavelengths. These animals have been quite interesting because they also have bright green fluorescence andvery strong gr
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The bait deployment system on the Eye-in-the-Sea, known as theCLAM (Cannibalized Ladder Alignment Mechanism), is closed beforeit is recovered from the bottom.
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The Eye-in-the-Sea is held on the front of the Johnson-Sea-Link submersibleduring launch.
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Lee Frey readies the LoLAR II (Low Light Autocalibrating Radiometer)instrument for deployment on the Johnson-Sea-Link submersible.
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The charismatic deep sea crustacean, Bathynomis giganteus.
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A flotilla of fish follow a transparent drifting jellyfish, Aurelia aurita.
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Marine scientist spiderman Misha Matz coordinates a blue water dive for 4companions - each at the end of a rope tether and each rope kept taut by aweight and pulley system that is attached to a toilet flange.
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The science crew gathers excitedly to examine recently collected specimensfor fluorescence and bioluminescence.
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