Going with the flow: Weather challenges bring new opportunities Expedition log by Science Communication Fellow Marike PinsonneaultThe opening days at sea have been defined by preparation, discovery, and the kind of adaptive problem-solving that fieldwork demands.Surveys at Central Slope Corals allowed the team to prepare for deeper dives at Sur Ridge and deploy the Portable Mapping System at a new location. Image: Javiera Fuentes Guíñez © 2026 MBARIWinds on day two prompted a shift from our primary dive site, Sur Ridge. Choppy weather makes launch and recovery of the MiniROV more challenging, so the team determined it would be safer to survey Sponge Ridge instead. Located inside Monterey Bay, this research site is approximately 550 meters (1,800 feet) deep and is more protected from the winds. Over the days that followed, the team refined workflows and carried out mapping operations at a site already familiar to the CoMPAS Lab. While portions of the ridge have been charted in previous work, the newly generated maps will meaningfully contribute to MBARI’s ongoing monitoring of Monterey Bay, enabling comparisons of seafloor change across multiple scales, from geological processes visible at meter-scale resolution to subtle shifts in marine life, such as the growth of sponges previously mapped by the CoMPAS Lab, captured at centimeter and millimeter scales. Next, we’ll explore a research site nicknamed “Central Slope Corals,” a location the CoMPAS Lab hasn’t mapped before. The name says it all—this rocky crest is home to various coral species and offers ample opportunities for the CoMPAS Lab to create new dynamic maps that can be built on in the future to monitor corals and topography. Central Slope Corals is much deeper than Sponge Ridge. Located approximately 1,100 meters (3,600 feet) underwater, this dive will be great practice for diving at Sur Ridge this weekend when the weather improves. These dives also served as a valuable engineering test, putting new tools through challenging weather conditions—testing the machine-learning-assisted laser scanner under varying turbidity, lighting, and visibility, and evaluating the vehicle controller in the presence of currents and swell. The weather may have reshaped our original plans, but it has not slowed us down. With Sur Ridge dives on the horizon, the second half of this expedition is shaping up to be even more rewarding than the first! Team Directory Aaron Micallef Senior Scientist/Marine Geologist CollaboratorsJong Kuk Hong (Korean Polar Research Institute), Young Keun Jin (Korean Polar Research Institute), Tae Siek Rhee (Korean Polar Research Institute), Scott Dallimore (Geological Survey of Canada). Mathieu Duchesne (Geological Survey of Canada) Share Like this? Share it! Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn Share on Email