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What would the oceans look like if humans never existed? Soon we may find out. Last week, National Geographic launched an expedition to some of the world’s most isolated waters in the South Pacific. Departing from Tahiti, the group will explore and document the islands and atolls of the southern Line Islands, which are largely uninhabited and so far from any industrialized area that commercial fishermen have never ventured into its waters. They’re going to spend the next six weeks posting their findings on the tremendous new Ocean Now website.

Leading the expedition is marine biologist and National Geographic Fellow Dr. Enric Sala, who was instrumental in helping to establish the new national marine monument in January of this year (read our interview with him here after the announcement). The route of the current expedition has been mapped out – and the best part is that you can follow along, posing questions to the crew and tracking their findings as they go. The latest update from the site is from Sala himself, who just returned from a dive off Vostok Island which he called the “best of his life.” From his most recent blog post, he writes:

A few days ago, I went on the best dive of my life. My team and I spent

hours underwater studying the reefs surrounding Vostok Island. It was

incredible–massive schools of fish, sharks, beautiful corals. This is

as pristine as the ocean gets, more pristine than Flint Island, and

even more than Kingman Reef. Vostok Island and the waters surrounding

it rank among our planet’s natural wonders, a priceless natural

treasure that should be protected for the ages.

Be sure to check out the site, and sign up for updates from the crew on where they’re headed next.

[Ocean Now]

Comments

  1. Kymri
    April 8, 2009, 11:29 am

    To best appreciate the “untouched” waters, NGS should also venture north into the Great Pacific Garbage Patch with an expedition team and cameras.

  2. Goader
    April 8, 2009, 11:44 am

    Please allow me to introduce a Website that provides audio travel guides:AllAudioGuides

  3. Christina Stockamore
    April 8, 2009, 11:55 am

    Actually, there’s another expedition currently underway by David de Rothschild, a National Geographic Emerging Explorer and founder of Adventure Ecology. He and his team have constructed a boat made entirely of plastic bottles, called the Plastiki, and are sailing from San Francisco to Sydney. One of the primary reasons for their trip is to sail past the Eastern Pacific Garbage Patch.
    http://ngadventure.typepad.com/blog/plastiki/

  4. Kymri
    April 8, 2009, 12:28 pm

    Ah, of course, thanks Christina! Now two blogs to follow!

  5. Eric
    April 9, 2009, 9:37 am

    Wow that is great. The ocean is always going to be Earth’s “outer-space” (if that even made sense). There’s a whole other world down there with strange things.
    I remember seeing clear-blue ocean water for the first time in Puerto Rico *sigh*.