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  1. Jun 20, 2019 · Image courtesy of Journey into Midnight: Light and Life Below the Twilight Zone. Download larger version (jpg, 1.2 MB) . A day later, the dust has cleared, and what do we know?

  2. The concept behind the system is that it is unobtrusive. Because the Medusa uses red lights that are invisible to most deep-sea inhabitants and has no noise-generating thrusters, it can serve as a stealthy observer of light and life below the twilight zone. Read more.

  3. From June 8 - 22, a team of researchers will explore the water column in some of the deepest parts of the Gulf of Mexico in order to determine what happens to deep-sea animals when a very important constraint is taken away from them – that of light.

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  4. Jun 22, 2019 · The discovery was made toward the end of a 17-day research mission dubbed Journey into Midnight which began June 7. “It was magical and surreal to see how the animal behaves in nature,” Bracken-Grissom said.

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  5. Jul 3, 2020 · The squid was captured by the Journey into Midnight expedition at a depth of 759 meters (2,490 feet) and looked to be 10 – 12 feet long. The scientists on the ship sent the footage to Michael Vecchione, a NOAA Fisheries zoologist and expert in all things octopus and squid, to see if he could identify the creature.

  6. Jun 24, 2019 · The project – Journey Into Midnight: Light and Life Below the Twilight Zone is ran from June 822, 2019 and featured Dr. Tracey Sutton, Dr. Tamara Frank and graduate assistant Ruchao Quian from NSU – they were three of the 10 explorers on this voyage.

  7. Journey into Midnight WhaleTimes.org Edie Journey into Midnight: Light and Life Below the Twilight Zone research funded by NOAA-Office of Exploration and Research Okay, fellow Science Team members, I’d like you to watch the video. Help us think about what was captured. Observe and discuss the squid’s behavior. What do you