Nova Scotia

Canadian, American scientists team up to explore deep ocean floor off Nova Scotia

Cameras will live stream never-before seen images of Canada's deepwater ocean canyons.

'We're going to get to explore areas that we have never surveyed before'

During the second leg of the Deep Connections 2019 expedition, ROV Deep Discoverer will be used to acquire high-definition visual data and collect limited physical samples in poorly explored areas of the U.S. and Canadian Atlantic Continental Margin. (NOAA)

An American deep sea research vessel is now scheduled to depart Halifax Tuesday on a "voyage of discovery" that will send cameras and other instruments into six deepwater ocean canyons and channels off Nova Scotia.

The 68-metre long Okeanos Explorer will stream the first images ever seen of the seafloor it surveys — at depths from 300 metres to 2½ kilometres from the ocean surface.

The ship was supposed to leave port Monday, but was delayed 24 hours by weather.

The mission to explore Atlantic seamounts and canyons of Canada and the United States is part of an international agreement to study the North Atlantic.

"We're really excited," said Canadian scientist Lindsay Beazley, who studies bottom-dwelling sponges and corals for the Department of Fisheries and Oceans.

Lindsay Beazley will provide commentary from the deepwater dives. (Craig Paisley/CBC)

"We're going to get to explore areas that we have never surveyed before in depth ranges that we don't have the capacity to survey with our own equipment here at DFO."

Live commentary from BIO

Beazley will help direct the dives and provide live commentary on the streaming video from an exploration command centre set up at the Bedford Institute of Oceanography in Dartmouth, N.S.

She said she doesn't know what to expect.

"That's the beauty of this mission," she said. "We don't know. It will be the first time we've surveyed this area."

The ship is operated by the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA.

"We're ocean-exploration driven, which means we're here to make discoveries and to really generate questions on where these things are and what those things are in their geographic extent," said Mike White of NOAA's office of ocean exploration and research.

Day and night missions

During the day, remotely operated cameras will send back images of the seafloor.

Those will include the unexplored bottom of the eastern side of The Gully, a large underwater canyon near Sable Island. It is Canada's first marine protected area.

This map shows the priority areas for and mapping operations to be conducted during the Deep Connections 2019 expedition, overlaid onto existing mapping data in the region. (NOAA)

At night, instruments will measure ocean depths and map, survey and sample geologic features.

"Understanding how these species are geographically distributed, understanding how these seafloor features relate to each other, their similarities or differences gives us a better understanding of the entire North Atlantic as a whole system," White said.

How you can watch

The cruise will deploy two vehicles on daylight dives and send back images from three cameras.

It takes a while to get to the bottom. Midday may be the best viewing.

The Museum of Natural History in Halifax will screen the livestream from 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. on Thursday. That's when the Okeanos Explorer is scheduled to be over The Gully.

Next week, the ship is scheduled to be off southwestern Nova Scotia surveying other significant areas.

Mission objectives

The cruise is examining poorly understood deepwater bottom where the continental shelf plunges into the depths.

In addition to collecting data on marine life, geological features and the water column, scientists also want to identify marine heritage sites, like shipwrecks.

Earlier this summer, the Okeanos Explorer tested technology produced by an Atlantic Canadian company that can do just that when it cruised deepwater from Virginia to Massachusetts.

Ship tests Atlantic Canada ocean mapping tech

During that mission it tested advanced ocean mapping technology developed by Kraken Robotics, a manufacturer of sonar and laser imaging devices capable of producing highly detailed images of the ocean floor.

Two of its products were among five tested in a NOAA technology demonstration.

Kraken sonar and scanners deployed by the Okeanos Explorer revealed shipwrecks in incredible detail.

"I think we were able to show that this sort of technology is certainly something that can improve our understanding particularly of marine heritage resources on the seafloor, but also things like object detection," said White.

Karl Kenny is the president of Kraken Robotics. (Craig Paisley/CBC)

Kraken president Karl Kenny says the demonstration was a big deal for the company. The company will not be on board this leg of the mission, which is scheduled to run until Sept. 15.

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Paul Withers

Reporter

Paul Withers is an award-winning journalist whose career started in the 1970s as a cartoonist. He has been covering Nova Scotia politics for more than 20 years.