Ever wondered what the ocean floor around Australia's coast looks like? A first-of-its-kind survey has uncovered new information about underwater canyons.
Deep below the surface, in waters off Australia’s east coast, lies a network of what scientists are now calling “sea floor super highways”.
“So, they’re carved into the side of this massive wall, much like a river valley or canyons you might see on land,” Dr Chapman explained.
On board the Investigator a combination of sonar technology and high-definition cameras were the eyes for the scientists almost 4 kilometres below the surface.
The camera quality goes well beyond other traditional forms of observation like scuba diving, giving a rare insight into species that are hard to spot.
“[Species] I heard about but never seen before, like the dumbo octopus and a really unfortunately-named fish called the bony-eared assfish,” Mr McKinnon laughed.
For Marine Parks Australia, those discoveries could help shape their management plans, which could be used to inform government policy, including fisheries and environmental regulations.
The original article contains 484 words, the summary contains 146 words. Saved 70%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Deep below the surface, in waters off Australia’s east coast, lies a network of what scientists are now calling “sea floor super highways”.
“So, they’re carved into the side of this massive wall, much like a river valley or canyons you might see on land,” Dr Chapman explained.
On board the Investigator a combination of sonar technology and high-definition cameras were the eyes for the scientists almost 4 kilometres below the surface.
The camera quality goes well beyond other traditional forms of observation like scuba diving, giving a rare insight into species that are hard to spot.
“[Species] I heard about but never seen before, like the dumbo octopus and a really unfortunately-named fish called the bony-eared assfish,” Mr McKinnon laughed.
For Marine Parks Australia, those discoveries could help shape their management plans, which could be used to inform government policy, including fisheries and environmental regulations.
The original article contains 484 words, the summary contains 146 words. Saved 70%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!