Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/007236409/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 30 of
30
with 100 items per page.
- catalog abstract "Prior to John Ross's successful retrieval in 1818 of six pounds of worm-filled mud from the bottom of Baffin Bay, it was widely believed that no life could possibly flourish in the dark, cold, pressurized waters of the deep Atlantic Ocean. Subsequent expeditions - conducted on ships with trawls, in submersibles such as William Beebe's bathysphere and Jacques Cousteau's Deepstar, and by remote-controlled and robotic diving devices - have unveiled a mind-boggling. menagerie, a riot of deep-sea fauna with which we are still only marginally acquainted. Even today, only a handful of people have seen the pillow lava, smoking chimneys, and shimmering water of the hydrothermal vent fields, which are colonized by blind white crabs, clams as big as footballs, and gigantic tube worms with vivid red gills. Only a lucky few explorers of the abyss have encountered Vampyroteuthis infernalis, the "vampire squid from hell," with its complex. clusters of photophores that it can turn on and off at will. A mere smattering of marine biologists have witnessed the herds of pulsating sea cucumbers that feed contentedly in the sand and mud of the Atlantic floor. And the same is true for the amazing pelican eel, whose body consists almost entirely of toothless mouth, and for the four-inch-long male anglerfish that permanently attaches himself to the nearly four-foot-long female. In the strikingly illustrated Deep. Atlantic, Richard Ellis brings us face-to-face with these unexpected efflorescences of evolution - fish, mammals, and members of other phyla that have been able to assume incredible shapes and great size thanks to the gravity-canceling buoyancy of water. The animals discussed and pictured herein are adapted for life in the predominant environment on our planet, since 70 percent of its surface is underwater and 90 percent of that water is more than a mile deep. Yet it is. an environment as foreign to us as another universe. As we have come to expect from his previous books, Richard Ellis is here again our engrossing guide to the last frontier on earth.".
- catalog contributor b9998075.
- catalog coverage "Atlantic Ocean.".
- catalog created "1996.".
- catalog date "1996".
- catalog date "1996.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1996.".
- catalog description "Atlantic, Richard Ellis brings us face-to-face with these unexpected efflorescences of evolution - fish, mammals, and members of other phyla that have been able to assume incredible shapes and great size thanks to the gravity-canceling buoyancy of water. The animals discussed and pictured herein are adapted for life in the predominant environment on our planet, since 70 percent of its surface is underwater and 90 percent of that water is more than a mile deep. Yet it is.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 329-376) and index.".
- catalog description "Part One: Exploration -- Studying the Atlantic -- The Gulf stream -- The ocean floor -- Exploring the deep -- By submarine across the Atlantic -- Hydrothermal vents -- Part Two: Creatures of the Abyss -- Introduction to deep-sea biology -- Invertebrates -- Deep-sea cephalopods -- Deepwater sharks -- Fishes of the depths -- Deep Atlantic whales and whaling -- Into the deep.".
- catalog description "Prior to John Ross's successful retrieval in 1818 of six pounds of worm-filled mud from the bottom of Baffin Bay, it was widely believed that no life could possibly flourish in the dark, cold, pressurized waters of the deep Atlantic Ocean. Subsequent expeditions - conducted on ships with trawls, in submersibles such as William Beebe's bathysphere and Jacques Cousteau's Deepstar, and by remote-controlled and robotic diving devices - have unveiled a mind-boggling.".
- catalog description "an environment as foreign to us as another universe. As we have come to expect from his previous books, Richard Ellis is here again our engrossing guide to the last frontier on earth.".
- catalog description "clusters of photophores that it can turn on and off at will. A mere smattering of marine biologists have witnessed the herds of pulsating sea cucumbers that feed contentedly in the sand and mud of the Atlantic floor. And the same is true for the amazing pelican eel, whose body consists almost entirely of toothless mouth, and for the four-inch-long male anglerfish that permanently attaches himself to the nearly four-foot-long female. In the strikingly illustrated Deep.".
- catalog description "menagerie, a riot of deep-sea fauna with which we are still only marginally acquainted. Even today, only a handful of people have seen the pillow lava, smoking chimneys, and shimmering water of the hydrothermal vent fields, which are colonized by blind white crabs, clams as big as footballs, and gigantic tube worms with vivid red gills. Only a lucky few explorers of the abyss have encountered Vampyroteuthis infernalis, the "vampire squid from hell," with its complex.".
- catalog extent "ix, 395 p. :".
- catalog hasFormat "Deep Atlantic.".
- catalog identifier "0679433244".
- catalog isFormatOf "Deep Atlantic.".
- catalog issued "1996".
- catalog issued "1996.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "New York : Alfred A. Knopf,".
- catalog relation "Deep Atlantic.".
- catalog spatial "Atlantic Ocean.".
- catalog subject "508.3163 20".
- catalog subject "Abyssal zone Atlantic Ocean.".
- catalog subject "GC87.2.A86 E45 1996".
- catalog tableOfContents "Part One: Exploration -- Studying the Atlantic -- The Gulf stream -- The ocean floor -- Exploring the deep -- By submarine across the Atlantic -- Hydrothermal vents -- Part Two: Creatures of the Abyss -- Introduction to deep-sea biology -- Invertebrates -- Deep-sea cephalopods -- Deepwater sharks -- Fishes of the depths -- Deep Atlantic whales and whaling -- Into the deep.".
- catalog title "Deep Atlantic : life, death, and exploration in the abyss / Richard Ellis.".
- catalog type "text".