
Field Report: A Deep See Experience
Shaun MacGillivrayWe were in Cocos Island National Park, 300 miles off Costa Rica’s west coast. And it was my first time in a submarine. As

Shaun MacGillivrayWe were in Cocos Island National Park, 300 miles off Costa Rica’s west coast. And it was my first time in a submarine. As

Ted Reckas360 nautical miles off the western shore of Costa Rica, a group of ocean operatives quietly prepare for a tactical dive on the rear

Dr. Richard PyleThe most extraordinary aspect of biodiversity to me is the way in which every living thing on earth, everything that has ever lived

Dr. Richard PyleWhenever I see a reef with an enormous abundance of large predators, I always wonder, where does the food come from? This field

Dr. Richard PyleOur drop-point was an undersea pinnacle known as Mount Everest. Howard and I would cling to the… This field report first appeared on

Dr. Richard PyleCocos Island is perhaps best known for an abundance of large marine animals, sharks in particular. Most iconic of these are the vast

Dr. Richard PyleMy colleagues and I have spent the past two decades traveling the tropical Pacific Ocean to document life that occurs below the realm…

Dr. Richard Pyle This field report first appeared on the NY Times Green blog December 21, 2011 as the first in a six-part series. Argo

Ted ReckasIn November, One World One Ocean traveled to Churchill, Canada—the “polar bear capital of the world”—to highlight the issues facing arctic.. In November, One

Shaun MacGillivray, Producer, One World One OceanWe’re sitting in a cove off Chatham Strait, a tributary of Alaska’s inside passage, surrounded by steep hills covered