The Sea Floor Around Us

Posted July 27, 2015 at 5:46 am by

The Whale Museum’s Lecture Series: “The Sea Floor Around Us” Presented by Gary Greene

Image courtesy of The Whale Museum

Image courtesy of The Whale Museum

The Whale Museum and San Juan Nature Institute are pleased to host Gary Greene for a lecture on July 30.  Professor Greene will discuss “The Sea Floor Around Us” on Thursday, July 30 at 6:30 p.m. at The Whale Museum in Friday Harbor. Formerly the Director of the Moss Landing Marine Labs on Monterey Bay in California and currently a research faculty member at Friday Harbor Labs, Greene has pioneered sophisticated interpretive sonar techniques to map the sea floor in many regions of the Pacific Ocean. Now working with SeaDoc Society and heading its Tombolo Mapping Lab on Orcas Island, he has been making high-resolution 3D images of the Salish Sea floor. In the process, he has uncovered previously unknown benthic habitats and discovered geological features such as submarine faults and folds.

Greene will bring alive the deep undersea world around us through his exquisitely detailed maps which reveal the habitats of rockfish, Pacific sand lance, and other organisms critical to the local marine food chain. Greene has also discovered a significant new geological fault he dubbed the Skipjack Island Fault, which begins near South Pender Island and extends eastward to pass between Orcas and Sucia Islands. He will discuss his current research on this and other local submarine faults, including whether or not they might be active.

The July 30th lecture event is free and open to the public. For more information, call (360) 378-4710, ext. 30.  The Whale Museum is located in Friday Harbor at 62 First St. N.  Founded in 1976, The Whale Museum’s mission is to promote stewardship of whales and the Salish Sea ecosystem through education and research.  In addition to providing exhibits, the Museum provides programs including Marine Naturalist Training, Orca Adoption Program, Soundwatch Boater Education, San Juan Islands Marine Mammal Stranding Network, and the Whale Hotline.  The Whale Museum can be found on-line at www.whalemuseum.org.

You can support the San Juan Update by doing business with our loyal advertisers, and by making a one-time contribution or a recurring donation.


Categories: Around Here

No comments yet. Be the first!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

By submitting a comment you grant the San Juan Update a perpetual license to reproduce your words and name/web site in attribution. Inappropriate, irrelevant and contentious comments may not be published at an admin's discretion. Your email is used for verification purposes only, it will never be shared.

Receive new post updates: Entries (RSS)
Receive followup comments updates: RSS 2.0