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In deeper waters: photographic studies of Hawaiian deep-sea habitats and life-forms
Chave, E.H.; Malahoff, A. (1998). In deeper waters: photographic studies of Hawaiian deep-sea habitats and life-forms. University of Hawaii Press: Honolulu. ISBN 0-8248-2003-7. 125 pp.

Available in  Authors 
    VLIZ: General COB.126 [101220]

Keywords
    Benthic fauna
    Deep sea
    Earth sciences > Geology
    ISE, Hawaiian Ridge
    Organisms > Eukaryotes > Animals
    Hawaiian Ridge [Marine Regions]
    Marine/Coastal

Authors  Top 
  • Chave, E.H.
  • Malahoff, A.

Abstract
    Thousands of meters beneath the surface of Hawaii's warm, sunlit waters lies the vast Hawaiian Ridge, a dark, cold region more than 2,600 kilometers in length. Its undersea mountains, sediment plains, lava flows, and volcanic vent fields are home to a variety of unusual deep-sea organisms. Since 1965, the ridge's unique geological features and animal communities have been studied with the aid of submersibles. This copiously illustrated volume describes 200 animals and geological formations photographed and collected by the University of Hawaii's HURL (Hawaii Undersea Research Laboratory) submersibles around the Hawaiian Islands, Cross Seamount, Loihi Volcano, and Johnston Atoll. In Deeper Waters is a valuable record for the professional and amateur marine biologist and geologist alike and adds substantially to our knowledge of deep-sea floor features and the distribution and behavior of their inhabitants.

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