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Earth Science

Scientists Discover Hidden Deep-Sea Coral Reef Off South Carolina Coast (cnn.com) 49

An anonymous reader shares a report: Little is known about the natural resources of the deep ocean off the United States' Southeast coast from Virginia to Georgia, so Deep Search 2018 was created to learn more by exploring the deep sea ecosystems. The project, consisting of scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, and the US Geological Survey, is nearing the end of its 15-day voyage aboard the research vessel Atlantis. A pair of dives in a submersible called Alvin confirmed the existence of the coral reef last week, and based on observations, researchers estimate the reef is at least 85 miles long. "This is a huge feature," expedition chief scientist Dr. Erik Cordes told HuffPost. "It's incredible that it stayed hidden off the US East Coast for so long." Cordes said the ecosystem is unlike anything he has seen, with "mountains" of corals.
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Scientists Discover Hidden Deep-Sea Coral Reef Off South Carolina Coast

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  • >"This is a huge feature," expedition chief scientist Dr. Erik Cordes told HuffPost. "It's incredible that it stayed hidden off the US East Coast for so long."

    I bet the U.S. Navy knew it was there but wasn't about to let the rest of the world know about it.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      You mean you think that something fishy is going on here?
    • Re:Hidden from whom? (Score:5, Informative)

      by MrMr ( 219533 ) on Tuesday August 28, 2018 @05:03AM (#57209138)
      It wasn't hidden from wikipedia.
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep-water_coral
      There's even a picture from a coral from South Carolina dating to 2002
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Then again in 2010 Coral was discovered in Atlanta and then navigated North where Coral saw a deer and got shot, but sadly Coral didn't die. After getting better, for a time Coral turned into a homicidal maniac. Then Coral finally made it to Virginia and got bit, and Coral died, but we still had to hear about Coral.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        In that entire page there is only one reference to "Carolina", and it's a caption for the picture you mentioned, stating that the coral was found there. There's nothing about a reef off South Carolina. My guess is that when that piece of coral was found, they simply assumed it came from the Carribbean.

    • Pretty much the only interesting feature they may want to hide is topography, for obvious reason, but that also can't stay really hidden for very obvious reason too that oceanography scientist, and anybody with sonar frankly, can measure the depth and make precise map. What this article about is only they found coral where none was found, and frankly that would not bring anything for the navy or anybody to keep it secret. This ins't about topographic feature again, this is about the local ecology of those k
    • Hidden from whom?

      Whether their sonar scans caused them to categorize it as coral, an undersea mountain ridge or even "Formation, Geological, Fucking, Random," I doubt very much that the Navy bothered to identify its composition.

  • by Errol backfiring ( 1280012 ) on Tuesday August 28, 2018 @04:00AM (#57209028) Journal

    "It's incredible that it stayed hidden off the US East Coast for so long."

    Well off course it stayed hidden. It did not want to be destroyed like most other coral reefs around the world. If I was treated like that, I would stay hidden as well.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Just saying...

  • ...I'd say its days are numbered.

  • by ZombieEngineer ( 738752 ) on Tuesday August 28, 2018 @04:32AM (#57209086)

    Apparently the Great Barrier Reef has moved in and out from the Australian coast line as the sea levels have risen and fallen with each ice age. From memory the difference in sea levels is about 30 meters.

    This reef could very well be a remanent coral reef from the last ice age and has evolved / adjusted to continue surviving at about 30 meters depth (which could also be the limit of light penetrating the ocean).

    The largest ships (oil tankers / cruise ships) have a draft between 12 to 20 meters so there is sufficient clearance that if these reefs are indeed in 30+ meters depth of water that no-one would of paid any attention.

  • Alvin (Score:4, Interesting)

    by careysub ( 976506 ) on Tuesday August 28, 2018 @07:03AM (#57209422)

    One thing I thought interesting about this was something mentioned in the story in passing, the use of the submersible Alvin which has been in use longer than most /. readers have been alive. It was launched in 1964. It is something like the Ship of Theseus though, it has been through many upgrades and replacements including a new titanium pressure hull in 1973.

    • I got a little nostalgic too seeing Alvin still in operation. When I was a kid I was fascinated with the titanic ship wreck and the technology used to investigate it (and seeing pictures of Alvin associated with it).

      Just for grins I looked up the wiki...all these years I had no idea the titanium pod could separate from the rest of the submersible in an emergency....cool.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Gotta MAGMA!! That reef is holding us back!!

  • Send Paul Allen to park his yacht over it so Gore can bitch about the climate! True fact: Paul Allen is single-handedly responsible for destroying 70% of the world's dead coral reefs by dragging his yacht anchor over them for months on end.
  • Here's how to tell if the government is wasting money. If there's something called the "Bureau of Ocean Energy Management", it's wasting money.
  • ... for what, two decades at least, all i have seen in the media is how the coral reefs are disappearing due to climate change. So I pictured just a bunch of unadaptable polyps going extinct. But no, suddenly it appears that a deep reef was discovered and then it's revealed that there are such things as deep reefs, etc.

    The point is, all the brouhaha over " ... it will mean the disappearance of ... " should actually be suffixed by " ... as we currently know it." So be it the climate or whatever, the fuss

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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