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Sledding for sediments

George Hampson, left, and Steve Page carefully extract collected sediment from the deep-sea epibenthic sled.  The sled, developed in the mid-1960s, was towed horizontally to collect the uppermost part of seafloor sediment, yielding a new view of populations living there. Instead of being desertlike, the researchers found the seafloor rich in invertebrate fauna, “comparable to…

George Hampson, left, and Steve Page carefully extract collected sediment from the deep-sea epibenthic sled.  The sled, developed in the mid-1960s, was towed horizontally to collect the uppermost part of seafloor sediment, yielding a new view of populations living there. Instead of being desertlike, the researchers found the seafloor rich in invertebrate fauna, “comparable to that of the shallow-water tropics. Circa 1965. (Photo by Peter Wiebe, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)

Image Credit: Unknown
Date: July 29, 2009
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Sledding for sediments

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