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DiveFilm Episode 50 - "The Cousteau Diving Saucer at Scripps" Episode | DiveFilm Podcast Video

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DiveFilm Podcast Video

Images and news of the ocean world. What's happening, what's interesting, and what's just fun to watch. Featuring underwater video from around the world, interviews with interesting people, and footage of all kinds of marine life, from Great White Sharks and Humpback Whales to tiny plankton and colorful coral reefs.

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DiveFilm Episode 50 - "The Cousteau Diving Saucer at Scripps"


DiveFilm Episode 50 - "The Cousteau Diving Saucer at Scripps"

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DATE : Sat, 22 Dec 2007 12:24:40 -0800
Entered in Database : 2007-12-22 20:24:40
length : 78287065
Link to the Show / Show Notes

Invented by Jacques-Yves Cousteau and Jean Mollard, the Soucoupe plongeante or "Diving Saucer" was a small two-person submarine that could dive to depths of over 1000 fsw. Back in the early 1960s, Professor Emeritus Dr. Doug Inman of Scripps Institution of Oceanography and other deep diving scientists from Scripps explored the deep underwater canyons off the California coast in the famed Cousteau Diving Saucer. These explorations led to a better understanding of how these deep canyons are formed over time by powerful "turbidity currents." Combining vintage underwater film footage from the 1916 silent film "Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea" with Scripps Archives images of the Cousteau Diving Saucer and underwater images from deep water canyon dives, Dr. Douglas Inman tells some of the stories of these historic scientific voyages into the deep water canyons.