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In a year-long mission, a BBC team probed a small part of the earth's amazing

undersea world. They completed 1000 dives and explored seven different
oceans across the globe. W hat they found was extraordinary...
To most of us, seas and oceans are featureless expanses. On a good day, the vast
surfaces stretching endlessly towards the horizon provide a picturesque foil for a sunset.
Yet these glassy waters hide an extraordinary world.

Early sightings of a dugong, or sea cow, were probably responsible for the myth of the mermaids. But their
numbers are declining rapidly. The expedition headed to the Bazaruto archipelago, nine miles off the coast
of Mozambique, to investigate the very last sustainable population of dugongs - which are related to
elephants - in the western Indian Ocean

In fact, we know more about the surface of Mars than we do about the deep ocean
floors, which is why a team of experts decided to probe a small part of the planet's seas,
and film it for an eight-part TV series, to be shown on BBC2 next month.
Headed by Paul Rose, ex-base commander of the British Antarctic Survey and dive
trainer to the US navy, the Oceans team includes maritime archaeologist Lucy Blue,
marine biologist and oceanographer Tooni Mahto, and conservationist Philippe
Cousteau, grandson of the celebrated underwater pioneer Jacques.
One of the team's divers observes a shoal of jacks circling with balletic precision. This behaviour is a
source of much debate, but is thought to be a defence mechanism against predators

Over a year, they set up eight expeditions to seven different seas and oceans across the
globe - spending more than 700 hours underwater, and completing 1,000 dives.
Their aim was to seek out the hidden secrets of our oceans and, ultimately, to better
understand how much we rely on these enigmatic and alien places.
A giant manta ray, known to have the biggest brains of all fish, spotted off the south coast of Mozambique.
In the background lurks a shark

Four-fifths of all life on Earth is found beneath the waves, and scientists estimate a
million new species are out there waiting to be discovered.
Below the surface of the oceans there are mountains that would dwarf the Himalayas,
waterfalls bigger than Niagara and more active volcanoes than anywhere else on the
planet.

Paul Rose explores the wreck of the Paraportiani, a cargo ship that sank off the coast of East Africa in 1967

The mid-ocean ridge, a chain of mountains that runs through all the great seas, is
37,300 miles long, with an average height of 3,000 metres.
Together, the oceans make up an unimaginably vast environment wrapped around more
than 70 per cent of the surface of the planet.
Despite the size of male sperm whales - which can reach up to 16 metres in length - sightings are rare. But
when you see one, it's worth the wait

It is no surprise, then, that a new species was discovered by the team during almost
every deepsea dive.
But there was more to find, including underwater caves that preserved the remains of
lost civilisations and wrecks that spoke of ancient battles.

Sea coral grows in abundance on the sheer, underwater cliffs of the reef at the island of Pemba, 50 miles off
the coast of East Africa and one of the three islands off Tanzania, along with Zanzibar and Mafia island
They saw rare and endangered creatures and dived in alien marine environments:
pitch-black waters turned purple by toxic bacteria, and eerie tannin-stained waters
housing bizarre creatures.
They even dived into a throng of sharks to test out a new repellent - and were relieved to
find it worked.

Huge sunfish are indigenous to the Sea of Cortez, a strip between the Baja California peninsula and
mainland Mexico, 60-130 miles wide and 995 miles long. These giants can grow up to six metres long

Unfortunately, they also found found evidence of the changes wrought by mankind -
warming seas destroying unique ecosystems and overfishing decimating entire species.
But there were also signs of hope: coral that harbour a special heat-resistant algae that
could also protect the other reefs of the world, and marine creatures with amazing
abilities to adapt to their changing world.
None of the dive team had ever seen a weedy sea dragon, found only in kelp forests. But Philippe Cousteau
and Tooni Mahto struck lucky at Fortescue Bay, on the east coast of Tasmania

And, in the Arctic, they discovered a potentially new species of amphipod - a great find,
as these tiny creatures provide a crucial link in the entire Arctic Ocean food chain.
There were numerous other highlights, including a rare encounter with a green-eyed
six-gill shark, a dive alongside Seri Indians, and swimming in the presence of the
terrifying Humboldt squid.
Here, they exclusively share with us some of the amazing sights they found under the
sea.
• Extracted from Oceans: Exploring The Hidden Depths Of The Underwater World by Paul
Rose and Anne Laking, BBC Books, £20. (c) Paul Rose and Anne Laking, 2008. To order
a copy at £18 (p&p free), tel: 0845 155 0720. Oceans starts on BBC2 on 12 November.

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