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GENERAL INTEREST

Dybas, C. L. "Deep-sea Floor Rivals Rain Forests in Diversity." Smithsonian 26.10 (Jan. 1996): 96–106. Surprisingly, the deep-sea floor is one of earth's most diverse habitats perhaps the most diverse.
http://www.smithsonianmag.si.edu/smithsonian/issues96/jan96/deepsea.html

Dybas, C. L. "Undertakers of the Deep." Natural History 108.9 (Nov. 1999): 40–47. Whale carcasses on the sea floor support islands of diverse, recently discovered marine life. Check out this article's web page for video.
http://www.amnh.org/naturalhistory/features/november99_whales.html

Kunzig, R. "In Deep Water." Discover 17.12 (Dec. 1996): 86–96. Hitch a ride on the great ocean conveyor.

Kunzig, R. "The Physics of Deep-sea Animals. They Love the Pressure." Discover 22.12 (Dec. 2001): 40–47. A look at how the inhabitants of the deep sea cope with the enormous pressure.

Levin, L. A. "Deep-ocean Life Where Oxygen is Scarce." American Scientist 90.5 (2002): 436–444. The distribution and causes of oxygen minimum zones, and the adaptations of the organisms that live in them.
http://www.americanscientist.org/template/AssetDetail/assetid/14701

Lutz, R. A. "Dawn in the Deep." National Geographic 203.2 (Feb.2003): 92–103. A scientific film project lights up the world of hydrothermal vent communities.

Lutz, R. A., T. M. Shank and R. Evans. "Life After Death in the Deep Sea. American Scientist 89.5 (Sept.–Oct. 2001): 422–431. A hydrothermal vent community soon recovers after being obliterated by a volcanic eruption.

MacDonald, I. R. and C. Fisher. "Life Without Light." National Geographic 190.4 (Oct. 1996): 86–97. Gas and oil deposits in the Gulf of Mexico support a biological community similar to that at hydrothermal vents.

Robison, B. H. "Light in the Ocean's Midwaters." Scientific American 273.1 (July 1995): 60–65. Fantastic glowing creatures, three-dimensional "spider webs," and high-tech craft float in a vast dimly lit space. No, this isn't science fiction, it's the world of the mesopelagic.

Ward, P. "Coils of Time." Discover 19.3 (Mar. 1998): 100–106. Learn more about Nautilus, a living fossil.

IN DEPTH

Beamish, R. J., K. D. Leask, O. A. Ivanov, A. A. Balanov, A. M. Orlov and B. Sinclair. "The Ecology, Distribution, and Abundance of Midwater Fishes of the Subarctic Pacific Gyres." Progress in Oceanography 43. 2–4 (1 Mar. 1999): 399–442.

Gebruk, A. V., S. V. Galkin, A. L. Vereshchaka, L. I. Moskalev and A. J. Southward. "Ecology and Biogeography of the Hydrothermal Vent Fauna of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge." Advances in Marine Biology 32 (1997): 94–144.

Koslow, J. A. "Seamounts and the Ecology of Deep-sea Fisheries. American Scientist 85.2 (Mar./Apr.1997): 168–176.

Levin, L. A., R. J. Etter, M. A. Rex, A. J. Gooday, C. R. Smith, J. Pineda, C. T. Stuart, R. R. Hessler and D. Pawson. "Environmental Influences on Regional Deep-sea Species Diversity." Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 32 (2001): 51–93.

Priede, I. G. and P. M. Bagley. "In Situ Studies on Deep-sea Demersal Fishes Using Autonomous Unmanned Lander Platforms." Oceanography and Marine Biology: An Annual Review 38 (2000): 357–392.

Snelgrove, P. V. and C. R. Smith. "A Riot of Species in an Environmental Calm: The Paradox of the Species Rich Deep-sea Floor. Oceanography and Marine Biology: An Annual Review 40 (2002): 311–342.

Sokolova, M. N. "Trophic Structure of the Abyssal Benthos." Advances in Marine Biology 32 (1997): 427–525.








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