oceangate

Our Heartfelt Condolences

Our thoughts are with the friends and family of those who were aboard the Titan submersible that was lost in the North Atlantic last week. 

In 2018, The SeaDoc Society funded three deep sea scientific research projects in the San Juan Islands that would not have been possible without OceanGate’s submersible technology and their professional team. OceanGate’s Cyclops 1 submersible enabled scientists to safely visualize the deep ecosystems of the Salish Sea and better study red urchins, sand lance, and the impact of scientific trawling on the seafloor. 

“In their hearts, they were scientists,” SeaDoc Society Science Director Joe Gaydos told The Washington Post last week. “Stockton wanted to make a difference … He wanted to do things that actually made the ocean better.” …

We Brought a Sub to the Salish Sea (PHOTOS)

We Brought a Sub to the Salish Sea (PHOTOS)

It’s amazing what you can get done if you have the right tools.

About a year ago, we made the decision to bring a manned submersible to the San Juan Islands for a week of seafloor research. We put out a call for proposals and ultimately decided on three great projects studying deep-dwelling red urchins, sand lance habitat and the effects of seafloor trawling.

In most cases, scientific results arrive slowly after data is processed and analyzed, but when a tool is offered up that grants a new perspective for observation, exciting discoveries can arrive quickly. We saw that during our week with the OceanGate submersible, with team after team brimming with excitement after popping out of the sub after several hours of deep sea immersion. 

Science on the Seafloor: A Research Submarine is Coming to the San Juan Islands

Science on the Seafloor: A Research Submarine is Coming to the San Juan Islands

What do red urchins, Pacific sand lance and scientific trawling of the seafloor all have in common?

All three exist at depths that can’t be easily observed by scientists -- that is unless you bring in some fancy tools. Enter SeaDoc and our friends at OceanGate Foundation, with whom we’ve partnered to bring a submarine (a manned submersible called Cyclops 1) to the San Juan Islands this September. We funded three unique research projects, none of which would be possible without this incredible piece of machinery to carry our teams.