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grinner
06-25-2004, 10:07 AM
Arctic Ocean Survey May Reveal Lost World

NORWAY: June 25, 2004


OSLO - A new survey of the depths of the ice-capped Arctic Ocean could reveal a lost world of living fossils and exotic new species from jellyfish to giant squid, scientists said yesterday.


The international scheme will include probing a 12,470-foot abyss off Canada described by project leaders as the "world's oldest sea water - a vast, still pool unstirred for millennia, walled by steep ridges and lidded with ice."

Scientists in the project, led from the University of Alaska, plan to use robot submarines and sonar to track down life in the chilly Arctic Ocean where they say many species may be at risk from global warming.

"This is the world's refrigerator where change has happened far more slowly than in other oceans," said researcher Russ Hopcroft at the University of Alaska, saying the census could easily double the number of species known in the Arctic.

The research is part of a $1 billion, 10-year global Census of Marine Life (CoML) funded by governments, companies and private donors. The Arctic survey got a $600,000 start-up grant from the private U.S. Alfred Sloan foundation yesterday.

Ron O'Dor, chief scientist of the 53-nation CoML, speculated that Arctic waters might hide creatures known only from fossils, such as trilobites that flourished 300 million years ago. The trilobites looked like over-sized modern woodlice.

He said it might find new types of jellyfish, giant squid or more humble plankton and algae in the barely surveyed ocean. "And this may be a last window of opportunity to study the Arctic because of climate change," he said.

INVASIVE SPECIES?

More southerly species may invade Arctic waters if the polar icecap melts while increased shipping could accidentally introduce new creatures to the region in ballast water and disrupt the pristine ecology, he said.

U.N. models say that the Arctic could be largely ice-free in summer by 2100 because of global warming, blamed mostly on emissions of gases from cars, power plants and factories.

About 7,000 species are already known from Russian-led surveys in the Arctic Ocean. "Anything that's fast enough to move out of the way may have been missed by previous surveys," focused on sampling water or sediments, Hopcoft said.

Arctic waters, about zero degrees Celsius (32 Fahrenheit) year-round, are unlikely to hide unknown commercial stocks of fish.

The 3,800-meter Canada Basin is a mystery because it is cut off from deep waters in the Pacific by the 70-meter deep Bering Strait and from currents from the more distant North Atlantic by 1,400-meter deep ridges and straits.

"This water has been isolated more than any other part of the world's oceans, including around Antarctica," said Bodil Bluhm of the University of Alaska. link (http://203.210.108.22/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/25688/story.htm)

Mike0812
06-25-2004, 12:38 PM
Cool :cool:. No telling what kind of things they can discover down there, given the chance...

grinner
06-25-2004, 12:45 PM
Dinosaurs... or whatever their water dwelling siblings were called.

Maybe they'll find the Nessie does exist and there is a connection between Loch Ness and the Artic Ocean??? :P

trubador
06-25-2004, 01:04 PM
I heard they found a giant popsicle up there. :snowman:

Mike0812
06-25-2004, 01:46 PM
I dunno, methinks Nessie is frelling with us. I bet she's just havin' a hell of a laugh at us, causing all sorts of havoc down there, occasionally poppin' up from place to place...probably even knows where Atlantis is :eh:. Damn you Nessie! :grr:

Antrobus
06-25-2004, 02:20 PM
Did they find a Stargate? Could be good news for another skiffy spinoff Stargate: Antartic - Revenge of the Ice People

grinner
06-25-2004, 02:32 PM
I sure how they don't wake up the Ice Warriors
http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/doctorwho/episodeguide/images/OO.jpg

AgentSun
06-25-2004, 02:39 PM
i think the yeti army is hidden there.

Mike0812
06-25-2004, 02:41 PM
:eek2: :horror:

grinner
06-25-2004, 02:46 PM
these?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/doctorwho/photonovels/snowmen/two/340/48.jpg

AgentSun
06-25-2004, 02:52 PM
yes! evidence at last!

NYPinTA
06-25-2004, 03:05 PM
Did they find a Stargate? Could be good news for another skiffy spinoff Stargate: Antartic - Revenge of the Ice People
Damn... you bet me to it. :lol

AgentSun
06-25-2004, 03:07 PM
revenge of the inuit.