Sea Change: A Message of the Oceans
by Sylvia Earle
On This Page
Description
"Equal parts memoir, adventure tale, and call to action, Sea Change: A Message of the Oceans has become a classic of environmental literature, at once the gripping adventure story of Earle's three decades of undersea exploration, an insider's introduction to the dynamic field of marine biology, and an urgent plea for the preservation of the world's fragile and rapidly deteriorating ocean ecosystems"--Tags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
a very personal account of this woman's history with, work on, and affection for the ocean. Read while on my first trip to the Caribbean
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Author Information

24+ Works 1,673 Members
Sylvia Earle can lay claim to the titles marine botanist, environmentalist, businesswoman, writer, and deep-sea explorer. Of them all, the last is perhaps the one that most captures the imagination. She has spent more than 6,000 hours (over seven months) underwater. In 1979, she attached herself to a submarine that took her, at times as fast as show more 100 feet per minute, to the ocean floor 1,250 feet below. Dressed in a "Jim suit," a futuristic concoction of plastic and metal armor, she made the deepest solo dive ever made without a cable connecting her to a support vessel at the surface. This daring dive is comparable to the NASA voyage to the moon 10 years before. In 1984 Earle became the co-designer (with Graham Hawkes) of Deep Rover, a deep-sea submersible capable of exploring the midwaters of the ocean. Their company, Deep Ocean Technology, went on to develop a second-generation submersible, Deep Flight, that can speed through the ocean at depths of as much as 4,000 feet. Currently under development is Ocean Everest, expected to operate at a depth of up to 35,800 feet, which will take scientists to the deepest parts of the sea. Although the uses of submersibles are still largely scientific, Earle hopes that they might one day transport laypeople to the bottom of the sea. She feels that the "experience of flying through a dark ocean, of watching the lights of a luminescent creature flash all around us" might help us gain more respect for the largely unexplored ocean world. In addition to the scientific work that led to her being appointed in 1990 as chief scientist of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Earle has worked tirelessly to educate the public. Working with Al Giddings, she coauthored a documentary film, Gentle Giants of the Pacific, which appeared on public television in 1980. In the same year, their book Exploring the Deep Frontier appeared. It includes a discussion of the "Jim dive." Her most recent scientific and environmental work has been to assess the environmental damage caused by the Prince William Sound oil spill and the results of Iraq's destruction of some 400 oil wells during the 1991 Persian Gulf War. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 1995
- Epigraph
- If some alien called me up..."Hello, this is Alpha, and we want to know what kind of life you have,"--I'd say, waterbased....Earth organisms figure out how to make do without almost anything else. The single nonnegotiable th... (show all)ing life requires is water.
--Christopher McKay, NASA scientist, Omni, July 1992 - Dedication
- I dedicate this to my best friends, Alice Richie Earle and Lewis Reade Earle, whose caring ethic is reflected on every page; to my irreverent, wonderfully tolerant and loving offspring, Elizabeth, Richie, and Gale; to my life... (show all)long hero, Harold J. Humm; and to all who seek to understand and protect the wild ocean.
- First words
- If the ultimate historians, geologists, were to show the full history of Earth vertically on a scale as long as the depth of the deepest sea, all of human history, about ten thousand years, would fit necely in the uppermost i... (show all)nch--about the depth of a depression made by a sea gull lightly riding on the surface.
Introduction: Suppose the oceans dried up tomorrow. Why should I care? - Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)If we fail, through inability to resolve thorny issues, or by default born of indifference, greed, or lack of knowledge, our kind might well be a passing short-term phenomenon, a mere three or four million-year blip in the ancient and ongoing saga of life on Earth.
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 173
- Popularity
- 188,423
- Reviews
- 1
- Rating
- (4.00)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 6
- ASINs
- 2

























































