09/02/2015,00:00:25,tinamolodtsova,wish you good remaining of the dive 09/02/2015,00:01:05,tinamolodtsova,SHIs 09/02/2015,00:02:10,tinamolodtsova,CORC 09/02/2015,00:02:33,tinamolodtsova,SPO 09/02/2015,00:03:56,tinamolodtsova,SPO 09/02/2015,00:06:37,tinamolodtsova,ZOA + BAR + OPHs 09/02/2015,00:07:09,tinamolodtsova,it is almost dead 09/02/2015,00:08:54,tinamolodtsova,URC 09/02/2015,00:12:02,tinamolodtsova,FSH 09/02/2015,00:13:22,tinamolodtsova,SHI 09/02/2015,00:13:46,rachelbassett, CMECS ROC/NA, lava boulders, outcrops, medium ROC, COR RUB? 09/02/2015,00:16:11,tinamolodtsova,ASR 09/02/2015,00:17:00,tinamolodtsova,CORI whip 09/02/2015,00:17:52,tinamolodtsova,SHI 09/02/2015,00:21:54,tinamolodtsova,good. you have coral and anemones 09/02/2015,00:22:43,tinamolodtsova,sorry, I am falling asleep\nthanks to everybody. will try to participate tomorrow 09/02/2015,00:23:03,asakomatsumoto,see you Tina! 09/02/2015,00:23:20,tinamolodtsova,FSH 09/02/2015,00:25:05,okexnav,LAT :18.30772, LON : -158.45394, DEPTH : 973.3968m, TEMP : 4.32875C, SAL : 34.45505 PSU, DO : 1.53968 mg/L 09/02/2015,00:25:59,Amy, I'm here 09/02/2015,00:26:12,Amy, frosting birthday cupcakes while i watch 09/02/2015,00:27:22,Amy, I'm pretty sure these are duclae 09/02/2015,00:27:26,Amy, ducale 09/02/2015,00:27:31,Amy, CORC w OPH 09/02/2015,00:29:07,Amy, could sample? 09/02/2015,00:29:47,Amy, very scientific - its the 2 tone color 09/02/2015,00:30:05,Amy, ducale i have collected have that 2 tone color 09/02/2015,00:30:19,Amy, cant do more than that without sample 09/02/2015,00:30:42,Amy, haven't seen a lot of them to know 09/02/2015,00:30:50,Amy, what was yours chris? 09/02/2015,00:32:24,Amy, bumps r siphonozoids 09/02/2015,00:35:07,okexnav,LAT :18.30755, LON : -158.45392, DEPTH : 980.4644m, TEMP : 4.32317C, SAL : 34.44799 PSU, DO : 1.51750 mg/L 09/02/2015,00:38:45,Amy, only way to settle the corallium debate would be to collect one ;) 09/02/2015,00:39:31,Amy, do we have any bio collections left or are we maxxed out? 09/02/2015,00:40:11,Amy, looks like some of those fuzzier yellow ones again if we could try again… 09/02/2015,00:40:52,Amy, I think one to left was one 09/02/2015,00:41:05,Amy, there in front of urchin 09/02/2015,00:45:09,okexnav,LAT :18.30725, LON : -158.45404, DEPTH : 988.2530m, TEMP : 4.32892C, SAL : 34.49858 PSU, DO : 1.54372 mg/L 09/02/2015,00:45:43,Amy, I have to sign off for a bit, happy with either the yellow fuzzy we r searching for or the coralliid as a collection, thanks 09/02/2015,00:45:47,Amy, this is a really neat spot! 09/02/2015,00:48:31,okeanosexplorer,CORPA 09/02/2015,00:51:09,asakomatsumoto,Chris, did you collected this paragorgia speceis before? 09/02/2015,00:53:55,asakomatsumoto,it is rather deep distribution. is this species fixed? I'm just curious about it 09/02/2015,00:54:36,asakomatsumoto,Thank you! 09/02/2015,00:55:08,okexnav,LAT :18.30728, LON : -158.45398, DEPTH : 990.8852m, TEMP : 4.27474C, SAL : 34.50292 PSU, DO : 1.54702 mg/L 09/02/2015,00:56:11,rachelbassett,Steep slope. Conglomerated lava boulders 09/02/2015,00:56:33,asakomatsumoto,very impressive Paragorgia exist such a deep water as you mentioned. Thank you . 09/02/2015,00:59:05,asakomatsumoto,screen light is unstable brinking. 09/02/2015,01:02:37,asakomatsumoto,color molph of that pink corallium 09/02/2015,01:02:39,asakomatsumoto,? 09/02/2015,01:05:07,okexnav,LAT :18.30704, LON : -158.45431, DEPTH :1009.1970m, TEMP : 4.26746C, SAL : 34.50270 PSU, DO : 1.55061 mg/L 09/02/2015,01:09:00,okeanosexplorer,POL 09/02/2015,01:10:08,Amy, is that its proboscis? 09/02/2015,01:10:58,Amy, CORPR 09/02/2015,01:12:29,Amy, polyps down 3-4 per whorl 09/02/2015,01:12:48,Amy, could be, need sample to be sure 09/02/2015,01:12:57,Amy, all about sclerites at the species level 09/02/2015,01:13:44,asakomatsumoto,this is what Scott mentioned as Narella-like. 09/02/2015,01:14:26,asakomatsumoto,when we looking for perpendicular polyp Primnoidae at the depth 2700. 09/02/2015,01:15:07,okexnav,LAT :18.30666, LON : -158.45407, DEPTH :1022.6049m, TEMP : 4.06043C, SAL : 34.51670 PSU, DO : 1.57916 mg/L 09/02/2015,01:19:11,rachelbassett,FSH 09/02/2015,01:20:34,rachelbassett, CMECS Unc/NA, Lava gravel mixed with medium lava boulders and MUD. 09/02/2015,01:23:45,Amy, no ideas 09/02/2015,01:25:06,okexnav,LAT :18.30643, LON : -158.45452, DEPTH :1049.0478m, TEMP : 4.01432C, SAL : 34.52047 PSU, DO : 1.62817 mg/L 09/02/2015,01:25:37,asakomatsumoto,we saw this coral before during this cruise, did we? 09/02/2015,01:27:43,asakomatsumoto,without collection, we cannot tell the species or genus for this 09/02/2015,01:31:19,asakomatsumoto,CORAC 09/02/2015,01:35:07,okexnav,LAT :18.30617, LON : -158.45448, DEPTH :1061.3779m, TEMP : 4.00432C, SAL : 34.52350 PSU, DO : 1.65051 mg/L 09/02/2015,01:35:49,asakomatsumoto,not CORAC I think 09/02/2015,01:36:20,Amy, could that be the same fuzzy one we were trying to collect? 09/02/2015,01:36:33,Amy, the video is jumpy from here.. 09/02/2015,01:36:36,asakomatsumoto,I suppose this is what we are looking for. 09/02/2015,01:38:00,Amy, CORPR 09/02/2015,01:39:04,Amy, video jumpy but looks like horizontal polyps at least 5 per whorl 09/02/2015,01:39:50,asakomatsumoto,video pixelized... 09/02/2015,01:40:38,asakomatsumoto,sorry I cant see detail 09/02/2015,01:43:52,rachelbassett,Large lava boulders. 09/02/2015,01:45:20,okexnav,LAT :18.30589, LON : -158.45465, DEPTH :1076.2114m, TEMP : 3.93082C, SAL : 34.52993 PSU, DO : 1.68163 mg/L 09/02/2015,01:46:31,asakomatsumoto,looks Acanghogorgiidae but not Acanthogorgia 09/02/2015,01:46:43,asakomatsumoto,Calcigorgia or Acalycigorgia? 09/02/2015,01:47:10,asakomatsumoto,sorry *Calcygorgia 09/02/2015,01:48:12,asakomatsumoto,Calcygorgia is northern species and Scott should know some species from Alaskan or Bering area. 09/02/2015,01:55:12,okexnav,LAT :18.30590, LON : -158.45451, DEPTH :1074.9151m, TEMP : 3.90660C, SAL : 34.53015 PSU, DO : 1.67851 mg/L 09/02/2015,01:55:48,asakomatsumoto,CORAC 09/02/2015,01:55:57,rachelbassett,Thanks everyone! Great dive!! 09/02/2015,01:57:39,asakomatsumoto,Thank you for exciting dive today. see you tomorrow! 09/02/2015,02:05:06,okexnav,LAT :18.30583, LON : -158.45461, DEPTH : 805.0441m, TEMP : 4.85070C, SAL : 34.48287 PSU, DO : 1.51852 mg/L 09/02/2015,02:15:08,okexnav,LAT :18.30761, LON : -158.45413, DEPTH : 505.5359m, TEMP : 6.56274C, SAL : 34.17453 PSU, DO : 1.92876 mg/L 09/02/2015,02:25:07,okexnav,LAT :18.30945, LON : -158.45405, DEPTH : 209.5267m, TEMP : 19.29382C, SAL : 34.86410 PSU, DO : 6.04721 mg/L 09/02/2015,02:35:07,okexnav,LAT :18.31213, LON : -158.45321, DEPTH : 9.6567m, TEMP : 28.64896C, SAL : 34.55429 PSU, DO : 6.52164 mg/L 09/02/2015,18:35:05,okexnav,LAT :19.23391, LON : -157.61215, DEPTH : 116.5341m, TEMP : 24.41430C, SAL : 35.08499 PSU, DO : 7.02806 mg/L 09/02/2015,18:45:09,okexnav,LAT :19.23330, LON : -157.61229, DEPTH : 410.1713m, TEMP : 8.13957C, SAL : 34.17614 PSU, DO : 3.04179 mg/L 09/02/2015,18:55:07,okexnav,LAT :19.23284, LON : -157.61222, DEPTH : 707.9537m, TEMP : 5.32918C, SAL : 34.43262 PSU, DO : 1.34643 mg/L 09/02/2015,19:05:06,okexnav,LAT :19.23237, LON : -157.61225, DEPTH :1012.2951m, TEMP : 4.12774C, SAL : 34.52520 PSU, DO : 1.56772 mg/L 09/02/2015,19:15:11,okexnav,LAT :19.23202, LON : -157.61206, DEPTH :1326.1893m, TEMP : 3.28201C, SAL : 34.56113 PSU, DO : 1.88843 mg/L 09/02/2015,19:25:08,okexnav,LAT :19.23209, LON : -157.61210, DEPTH :1630.1094m, TEMP : 2.64097C, SAL : 34.59691 PSU, DO : 2.26764 mg/L 09/02/2015,19:35:11,okexnav,LAT :19.23213, LON : -157.61202, DEPTH :1945.3603m, TEMP : 2.20910C, SAL : 34.62239 PSU, DO : 2.74507 mg/L 09/02/2015,19:45:08,okexnav,LAT :19.23153, LON : -157.61188, DEPTH :2150.5148m, TEMP : 1.94148C, SAL : 34.63944 PSU, DO : 3.09952 mg/L 09/02/2015,19:46:40,rachelbassett, CMECS Unc/ROC, SED and lava gravel/lava boulders 09/02/2015,19:52:24,Scott, Wow! 09/02/2015,19:52:37,Scott, This is why one does not step away from the computer for long... 09/02/2015,19:52:54,Scott, That is a very popular rock for isidids! 09/02/2015,19:53:19,Scott, CORCR Iridogorgia 09/02/2015,19:53:41,Scott, "Isidella" 09/02/2015,19:53:57,Scott, Very thin delicate branches… 09/02/2015,19:54:15,Scott, I should be at the ECC within 45 minutes... 09/02/2015,19:54:52,Scott, Note the branches on this small one in front were more straight than the large ones behind which have curving branches 09/02/2015,19:55:08,okexnav,LAT :19.23148, LON : -157.61189, DEPTH :2151.7601m, TEMP : 1.96471C, SAL : 34.63761 PSU, DO : 3.06792 mg/L 09/02/2015,19:55:19,Scott, ZOA overgraowth 09/02/2015,19:55:50,Scott, Internodal branching on this one with ZOA, so agree Keratoisis like 09/02/2015,19:56:34,Scott, Keratoisis with much of colony overgrown by ZOA (the last close-up, not the current one) 09/02/2015,19:57:26,Scott, I suspect most of the big stuff on this rock is the same Keratoisis, with some smaller Isidella around the edges 09/02/2015,19:57:53,Scott, Have to get ready to go over to UH campus, so promise you won't find the spectacular motherlode while I'm in transit. ;-) 09/02/2015,20:00:55,Roland, I saw a couple of earlier comments of loss of connection. Please Private chat with me to give an update on Video, Audio, Conference Call status. 09/02/2015,20:02:44,Scott, Looks like CORCR Pleurogorgia (what we called "pinnata" earlier 09/02/2015,20:03:38,rachelbassett,SLIG SED layer with numerous large lava boulders protruding 09/02/2015,20:05:08,okexnav,LAT :19.23122, LON : -157.61166, DEPTH :2134.9315m, TEMP : 1.97414C, SAL : 34.63795 PSU, DO : 3.07459 mg/L 09/02/2015,20:06:59,Amy, Looks like you found an impressive place to start the dive! 09/02/2015,20:13:43,asakomatsumoto,I was lucky to come in the exciting view for me! 09/02/2015,20:15:08,okexnav,LAT :19.23115, LON : -157.61168, DEPTH :2130.5298m, TEMP : 1.99747C, SAL : 34.63664 PSU, DO : 3.01147 mg/L 09/02/2015,20:17:39,brucemundy#8th8Pt8r88#,SHI 09/02/2015,20:17:51,Amy, video is pretty choppy 09/02/2015,20:17:52,brucemundy#8th8Pt8r88#,Video is good at IRC 09/02/2015,20:17:58,Roland, Mary is that on I-1 or I-2? 09/02/2015,20:18:24,Roland, Chat me privately to report these also. 09/02/2015,20:21:25,okeanosexplorer,SQA 09/02/2015,20:21:41,Amy, field of CORI 09/02/2015,20:21:58,Amy, looks like 2-3 species 09/02/2015,20:24:30,Amy, polyps were also alternating ont he CORI we just zoomed on 09/02/2015,20:24:45,Amy, Brisingid on dead coral stalk 09/02/2015,20:25:09,okexnav,LAT :19.23094, LON : -157.61157, DEPTH :2118.8544m, TEMP : 1.98158C, SAL : 34.63822 PSU, DO : 3.03044 mg/L 09/02/2015,20:27:49,brucemundy,FSH 09/02/2015,20:27:56,brucemundy,Macrouridae 09/02/2015,20:28:26,brucemundy,First grenadier (rattail) that we seen at the Geologist Seamounts. 09/02/2015,20:28:43,brucemundy,Hope to see more, with better views 09/02/2015,20:33:12,rachelbassett, CMECS ROC/NA, Large Lava outcrop, little to no SED cover 09/02/2015,20:33:26,Amy, scale worms on ASR 09/02/2015,20:33:29,Amy, ASR on CORI 09/02/2015,20:33:54,Amy, payback! 09/02/2015,20:34:01,Amy, they are POL 09/02/2015,20:34:06,Amy, sacle worms 09/02/2015,20:34:09,Amy, scale 09/02/2015,20:35:06,okexnav,LAT :19.23079, LON : -157.61156, DEPTH :2113.0478m, TEMP : 1.97119C, SAL : 34.63775 PSU, DO : 3.06547 mg/L 09/02/2015,20:45:09,okexnav,LAT :19.23074, LON : -157.61179, DEPTH :2113.6850m, TEMP : 1.96539C, SAL : 34.63805 PSU, DO : 3.04087 mg/L 09/02/2015,20:50:05,rachelbassett, CMECS ROC/Unc, Lava boulders and outcrop/MUD 09/02/2015,20:51:07,brucemundy,Video frozen at IRC 09/02/2015,20:51:16,okeanosexplorer,ASR 09/02/2015,20:51:25,asakomatsumoto,video frozen in Japan 09/02/2015,20:52:00,rachelbassett,video frozen in Charleston 09/02/2015,20:53:38,rachelbassett,video back 09/02/2015,20:53:57,brucemundy,back at IRC, too. 09/02/2015,20:54:40,brucemundy,FSH 09/02/2015,20:56:19,okexnav,LAT :19.23056, LON : -157.61184, DEPTH :2114.4394m, TEMP : 1.95670C, SAL : 34.64093 PSU, DO : 3.04963 mg/L 09/02/2015,20:56:46,brucemundy,Synaphobranchidae. subfamily Ilyophinae. That's the best that I can do for now. 09/02/2015,20:56:55,asakomatsumoto,bideo already back here 09/02/2015,20:57:00,asakomatsumoto,*video 09/02/2015,20:57:23,rachelbassett,SCP 09/02/2015,21:01:30,asakomatsumoto,it means that if we could collect that SPO, we can collect CORO at a same time. 09/02/2015,21:05:09,okexnav,LAT :19.23038, LON : -157.61200, DEPTH :2116.4934m, TEMP : 1.95262C, SAL : 34.63902 PSU, DO : 3.05939 mg/L 09/02/2015,21:08:23,brucemundy,That was the voice of Chris Kelley from Hawaii Pacific University;-) 09/02/2015,21:12:44,brucemundy,SHI 09/02/2015,21:15:12,okexnav,LAT :19.23013, LON : -157.61224, DEPTH :2121.7552m, TEMP : 1.95517C, SAL : 34.63866 PSU, DO : 3.07741 mg/L 09/02/2015,21:19:05,asakomatsumoto,video frozen 09/02/2015,21:19:57,asakomatsumoto,back 09/02/2015,21:25:09,okexnav,LAT :19.22983, LON : -157.61240, DEPTH :2117.2461m, TEMP : 1.95290C, SAL : 34.63804 PSU, DO : 3.03258 mg/L 09/02/2015,21:35:07,okexnav,LAT :19.22981, LON : -157.61243, DEPTH :2111.7495m, TEMP : 1.99520C, SAL : 34.63594 PSU, DO : 2.99535 mg/L 09/02/2015,21:40:28,rachelbassett, CMECS ROC/NA, Large Lava ridge-outcrop 09/02/2015,21:45:07,okexnav,LAT :19.22967, LON : -157.61268, DEPTH :2119.6877m, TEMP : 2.00093C, SAL : 34.63370 PSU, DO : 2.98684 mg/L 09/02/2015,21:45:39,rachelbassett,Hit a patch of sediment and gravel. medium boulders 09/02/2015,21:46:08,rachelbassett,?CMECS Unc/ROC, lava gravel with MUD/Lava boulders medium 09/02/2015,21:54:08,okeanosexplorer,CORPR 09/02/2015,21:54:23,asakomatsumoto,I agree for Candidella. I think we alrady found this kind of species during this leg. 09/02/2015,21:55:08,okexnav,LAT :19.22956, LON : -157.61272, DEPTH :2123.3146m, TEMP : 1.97556C, SAL : 34.63757 PSU, DO : 3.02031 mg/L 09/02/2015,21:56:49,asakomatsumoto,it was branched colony and this is unbranched. but polyps looks similar for me. 09/02/2015,22:05:05,okexnav,LAT :19.22944, LON : -157.61286, DEPTH :2120.9048m, TEMP : 1.98163C, SAL : 34.63646 PSU, DO : 3.02506 mg/L 09/02/2015,22:10:16,Scott, cane-shaped (or staff-shaped) colony was Candidella gigantea 09/02/2015,22:10:33,Scott, Note: set up on UH wireless now so back in eventlog 09/02/2015,22:11:00,Scott, The ECC set-up here at Hawaii Institute of Geophysics is terrific. 09/02/2015,22:11:46,asakomatsumoto,Hi Scott, glad to know you have safly arrive to Hawaii :) 09/02/2015,22:15:11,okexnav,LAT :19.22919, LON : -157.61300, DEPTH :2124.2100m, TEMP : 1.96494C, SAL : 34.63824 PSU, DO : 3.01880 mg/L 09/02/2015,22:15:39,Scott, @Asako: Thanks! The flights were all just fine in spite of the swirling hurricanes in the area! 09/02/2015,22:16:39,rachelbassett, CMECS Unc/NA. Lave RUB field medium to large with MUD 09/02/2015,22:18:42,asakomatsumoto,I thought the hurricanes change direction from Hawaii to Japan and become Typhoon No 17! 09/02/2015,22:18:59,asakomatsumoto,@Scott: but it was lucky for you and cruises :) 09/02/2015,22:18:59,Scott, You've been dropped from conference line. 09/02/2015,22:25:09,okexnav,LAT :19.22895, LON : -157.61317, DEPTH :2125.4044m, TEMP : 1.97340C, SAL : 34.63808 PSU, DO : 3.07117 mg/L 09/02/2015,22:35:06,okexnav,LAT :19.22874, LON : -157.61333, DEPTH :2121.7123m, TEMP : 2.01052C, SAL : 34.63581 PSU, DO : 3.00617 mg/L 09/02/2015,22:39:34,okeanosexplorer,COR Calyptophora? 09/02/2015,22:39:38,Scott, CORA 09/02/2015,22:40:10,Scott, ?Heteropathes 09/02/2015,22:41:03,Scott, Stepping outside for a moment. 09/02/2015,22:41:57,okeanosexplorer,COR Heteropathes? 09/02/2015,22:43:25,rachelbassett, CMECS Unc/ROC, MUD/Small to medium lava boulders 09/02/2015,22:45:08,okexnav,LAT :19.22840, LON : -157.61373, DEPTH :2115.6314m, TEMP : 2.05948C, SAL : 34.63232 PSU, DO : 2.90599 mg/L 09/02/2015,22:58:39,rachelbassett, CMECS ROC/NA, Large Lava outcrops, small SED pockets 09/02/2015,23:01:18,brucemundy,FHS 09/02/2015,23:01:21,brucemundy,Macrouridae 09/02/2015,23:03:26,Scott, CORPR Candidella gigantea 09/02/2015,23:04:19,brucemundy,May be the same round-nosed genus or species that we saw on leg one (Trachonurus or Malacocephalus) but this fish looked a little different. I don't think that it is the same species that we saw up north. The snout looked too rounded to be a Nezumia species. 09/02/2015,23:04:27,brucemundy,Video frozen now at IRC 09/02/2015,23:04:36,Scott, Video frozen at UH ECC 09/02/2015,23:04:50,Scott, But conference line still active 09/02/2015,23:05:17,brucemundy,Ophidiidae 09/02/2015,23:06:11,brucemundy,Spine on the upper end fothe gill opening. Short deep body. Couldn't see other characters that might help with an identification. 09/02/2015,23:08:37,Scott, Some more of the Acanella colonies tucked in that last flyover 09/02/2015,23:08:56,brucemundy,FSIH 09/02/2015,23:09:01,brucemundy,*FSH 09/02/2015,23:09:28,Scott, Several small Pleurogorgia colonies behind fish 09/02/2015,23:09:34,brucemundy,Yes, probably the same species of Macrouridae as the last one. 09/02/2015,23:09:55,brucemundy,Good video. We should be able to figure this out later in the video lab. 09/02/2015,23:10:20,brucemundy,Interesting sculpturing on the head. That may be useful. 09/02/2015,23:13:04,brucemundy,Unfortunately, some of the characters for this group are things like the presence or absence of a light organ on the belly, and the number of branchiostegal rays (the bony stays beneath the gill cover). Nevertheless, the great video should enable us to make some educated guesses. 09/02/2015,23:14:26,asakomatsumoto,corals fell down to the same direction. 09/02/2015,23:15:11,okexnav,LAT :19.22782, LON : -157.61499, DEPTH :2083.0435m, TEMP : 2.11779C, SAL : 34.62943 PSU, DO : 2.80354 mg/L 09/02/2015,23:15:30,brucemundy,FSH 09/02/2015,23:15:51,brucemundy,Ophidiiformes 09/02/2015,23:20:17,brucemundy,May be a Bythitidae, because of the swollen cloacal morphology. Species in that family are livebearers. It may have been a Diplacanthopoma species. 09/02/2015,23:22:29,Scott, Can I suggest a sample from one of these dominant "Keratoisis/Eknomisis" fans if we don't encounter anything more unusal before dive's end. 09/02/2015,23:24:03,brucemundy,2083 meters is rather deep for a bythitid though. But as I mentioned on the telecon, the only known specimens of Diplacanthopoma from Hawai`i were found floating at the surface off of a Big Island lava flow, so we don't know what depths they live at in this region. Discoveries in exploration! 09/02/2015,23:25:08,okexnav,LAT :19.22787, LON : -157.61542, DEPTH :2072.2336m, TEMP : 2.05987C, SAL : 34.63282 PSU, DO : 2.84439 mg/L 09/02/2015,23:29:04,Scott, Note: the black corals we saw earlier that I suggested might be Heteropathes are more likely Trissopathes. Heteropathes is monopodial. 09/02/2015,23:29:06,asakomatsumoto,I agree with Scott to collect materials because they are so dominant species so it helps to know deep sea coral community at this depth. 09/02/2015,23:32:57,Scott, Video frozen 09/02/2015,23:33:21,Scott, The white ones are definitely ZOA... 09/02/2015,23:33:27,asakomatsumoto,video frozen too 09/02/2015,23:33:31,Scott, The yellow ones I'm not as certain 09/02/2015,23:33:51,Scott, You are in-and-out on the conference line... 09/02/2015,23:34:09,asakomatsumoto,yellow one looks sea anemone-like for me.. 09/02/2015,23:35:07,okexnav,LAT :19.22787, LON : -157.61554, DEPTH :2066.5374m, TEMP : 2.04876C, SAL : 34.63377 PSU, DO : 2.92059 mg/L 09/02/2015,23:35:33,Scott, Many HYD also overgrowing the skeleton 09/02/2015,23:35:48,asakomatsumoto,video choppy 09/02/2015,23:45:08,okexnav,LAT :19.22784, LON : -157.61567, DEPTH :2070.7910m, TEMP : 2.03469C, SAL : 34.63372 PSU, DO : 2.91430 mg/L 09/02/2015,23:46:39,brucemundy,SHI 09/02/2015,23:50:22,brucemundy,FSH 09/02/2015,23:50:29,brucemundy,Ophidiidae 09/02/2015,23:50:29,J.R., Finally found some seamount naming history with the help of NOAA CDR Ben Evans: Ellis was named after William Ellis, a missionary who passed through the Hawaiian Islands in the 1800s:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Ellis_(missionary) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Ellis_%28missionary%29 . From the Wiki "They were some of the first Europeans to visit the caldera of the Kīlauea https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilauea volcano, which was active at the time." Swordfish was named after the fish (Xiphias gladius). McCall was possibly named for volcanologist and planetary geophysicist GJH McCall. 09/02/2015,23:50:43,brucemundy,Bassozetus species 09/02/2015,23:51:36,Scott, Thanks for that info JR. It is always interesting to learn of the names. 09/02/2015,23:55:12,okexnav,LAT :19.22763, LON : -157.61592, DEPTH :2078.1451m, TEMP : 2.02267C, SAL : 34.63340 PSU, DO : 2.93765 mg/L 09/02/2015,23:56:53,asakomatsumoto,Thank you for the information about the naming history for this region. 09/02/2015,23:58:05,brucemundy,FSH 09/02/2015,23:58:09,brucemundy,Macrouridae 09/02/2015,23:58:20,brucemundy,Same round-nosed species as the last two? 09/02/2015,23:59:21,rachelbassett, CMECS ROC/Unc, Large lava boulders/MUD