Video Gallery
Modern video technology has changed the way we all experience the ocean depths. William Beebe's
1934 book Half Mile Down revealed the deep sea for lay audiences - in a few black and white
photographs and line drawings. Mass media - film and television - created a rise in public interest
in the deep ocean from the 1960s to the present, promoted first by Capt. Jacques Cousteau, The
National Geographic Society and Discovery Channel and other underwater film and video pioneers.
Today, video is a common tool for ocean scientists and educators as well as film and video production
professionals. At Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, we use video as a seafloor observation tool.
Cameras attached to Remotely Operated Vehicles (ROVs) and other submersibles allow us to explore and
verify seafloor composition, habitats and the occurrence of fishes and invertebrate species. In
addition, we use video to survey shipwrecks.
Enjoy some of our clips, taken from our research expeditions. For more information about our video
library please e-mail
olympiccoast@noaa.gov
and include the words “VIDEO REQUEST” in the subject header.
Click on an image to play the video
Deep Sea Videos
|
Wrestling Brittle Stars (13.4Mb)
|
Flapjack Devilfish (3.8Mb)
|
Meet fish on the seafloor! (5.1Mb)
|
Weird world of sponges (16.1Mb)
|
Sea star Who's Who (8Mb)
|
Follow the flatfish! (8.6Mb)
|
Crabs on the go (9.5Mb)
|
What in the ocean? (4.2Mb)
|
Deep Sea Coral Flythru (91.2Mb)
|
Spot the shrimp! (11.3Mb)
|
Wandering octopus (7.3Mb)
|
Deep sea coral (3.9Mb)
|
Brittle stars are fast! (454k)
|
Take-out lunch (405k)
|
Watch out for halibut! (400k)
|
Slow moving octopus (481k)
|
Graceful skate (359k)
|
Contact for page content: Katie Brenkman