Exploration “A vast pulpy mass,” wrote Herman Melville in Moby-Dick, ” lay floating on the water, innumerable long arms radiating from its centre, and curling and twisting like a nest of anacondas, as if blindly to catch at any hapless object For all the extravagant commentary it has inspired, however, no modern-day kraken has ever been seen alive, much less captured or filmed. Virtually the only proof of its existence is the 150-odd carcasses that have appeared during the past century. Which is why Emory Kristof, a pioneer of deep-sea photography, may not be overstating things when he pronounces his present quest Sometime this winter, Kristof, whose portfolio of deep-water images includes the first portraits of the Titanic, will launch an effort to become the first person ever to film a kraken. Aided by a six-man team, he’ll try to lure one to his cameras with a sophisticated biomolecular baiting system comprised of liquefied fish slurry. Only problem is, What could prove to be a decisive segment of this scientific steeplechase kicks off in January when Smithsonian zoologist Clyde Roper journeys to the Pacific’s Kaikoura Canyon, a submarine trench just off the coast of New Zealand that is something of a mecca for squid-seekers. The 61-year-old Roper, whose moniker is Dr. Squid, has spent the last three decades pursuing his Kristof may be less blithe about dismissing the small group of New Zealand researchers involved in something called Project Deep Quest. For the past year, they have been quietly scouring several secret sections of ocean around the Kaikoura with the aid of a sonar-mounted underwater sled in a systematic search that could soon bear fruit, given their intimate knowledge of the |
A pack of researchers pursues the elusive giant squid
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