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(713) 523-3483 (dive)
5808 Newcastle Drive
Houston, TX 77401

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Blog

January 10, 2025 by Eric Keibler

Photo Hint – Adding a Diver for Scale and Interest

By Tobias Friedrich

Placing a diver into the background of an image is always a good idea and works best in wreck photography. This can be planned before the dive or can be a spontaneous situation like this, with the diver swimming by an opening with blue water in the background. Make sure to catch this moment by taking several images with your camera, then select the best one.

Equipment: SeaLife Micro 3.0, Sea Dragon 3000F

Settings: Deep Water White Balance

If you’d like a copy of the above underwater image, please email: lindsay@pioneer-research.com

SeaLife Micro 3.0 Pro 3000 Set

SL552 – Available now! Ideal for colorful, sharp stills and videos, the Micro 3.0 Pro 3000 Set includes the Sea Dragon 3000F Photo-Video Light, Micro 3.0 Camera, Flex-Connect Single Tray and Grip for optimal stability and handling. The SeaLife Micro 3.0 camera offers easy set-up with automatic and manual image setting options. The Sea Dragon 3000F Light has a Color Rendering Index of 80, with a 5000k color temperature to simulate natural sunlight. Sea Dragon Photo/Video Lightsreveal beautiful colors in underwater photos and videos.

Micro Wide Angle Dome Lens

SL052- Available January 2022 The SeaLife Micro Wide Angle Dome Lensincreases the camera’s field of view by 43% and allows for 3x closer shooting distance. For the SeaLife Micro 3.0, the lens angle is increased from 100° to 143° and shooting distance is reduced from 15”/38cm to 5”/13cm. The 0.7x dome lens high-grade optical design improves overall image quality and edge sharpness. Fits all SeaLife Micro-series and ReefMaster RM-4K camera models.

Filed Under: Photography Tagged With: Sea Dragon, SeaLife Cameras, underwater photography

November 25, 2024 by Eric Keibler

Scuba Black Tag Sale

I don’t know what it is about the Holidays and the start of the Christmas season that triggers some crazy thoughts but Eric and Ann are not immune from those thoughts. For some odd reason they decided to have a wild time and hang some special black tags around the store!

So what does this mean for the Oceanic Ventures group?

Savings Throughout the Store!

No room is spared from the black tags. So whither it is environmental protection, travel or swimwear there are tags..

Our recomendation – come early for the best selection.

And yes you will also find adult and night diving beverages available too!

Call if you have any questions!

Filed Under: Sales and Fun Tagged With: Black Friday, Black Tag Sale, small business saturday

November 19, 2024 by Eric Keibler

Check Out these Black Friday Sales

Camera Housing Special

From November 18 to December 9, 2024

Oceanic+ iPhone Housing

$399.95

Zeagle BCD Special

From November 18 to December 9, 2024

Buy a custom Ranger, Stiletto or Zena BCD and save the custom fees!

$200 Savings!

Dive Computer Special

From November 18 to December 9, 2024

Purchase an EON Steel or EON Core & you will receive a FREE tank Pod

(while manufacturers supplies last)

$439.95 Savings!

Camera Special

From November 18 to December 9, 2024

Get your Micro 3.0 camera and receive a free 2300 light, tray and arm for free!

Hurry because this is limited to the manufacturers stock and availabllity!

$599.95

yousave $299

Winter Diving Special

From November 18 to December 9, 2024

Hollis Neotek 8/7/6 V2 Semi-Dry Suit

or the Hollis Neotek 4/3 Wetsuit

20% off

Photographer’s Special

From November 18 to December 25, 2024

Briing in an old underwater strobe, you don’t use anymore, working or not and trade it for Sea & Sea’s latest high-end underwater strobe, the YS-D3 Duo strobe. This is the perfect strobe for your camera featuring fast recycle times, dual flash tubes and a guide number of 33!

Hurry, this offer ends at Christmas and is limited to the manufacturer’s current inventory,

Save $200.00

Zeagle, Atomic, Suunto & Bare Upgrade Program

From November 18 to December 9, 2024

This is your opportunity to turn your old life-support equipment into new state of the art diving equipment. Bring in your old air delivery system, computer, BCD or drysuit and leave with some new equipment and a 20% savings. Ask Dive Mom for the details.

Don’t go another season with your old gear; jump into 2025 with some new equipment!

20% off

Black Tag Sale

November 29-30, 2024

TDive Mom and Eric have gone crazy and have slashed the prices on a lot of merchandise and you are the beneficiary! Compe look for the Black Tags and see what the special pricing it!

Come early for the best selection!!

10% to 60% off

selected merchandise

Filed Under: Equipment, Sales and Fun

August 20, 2024 by Eric Keibler

Club Aquarius Social Club Is Back in August

Greg Such

Guest Speaker – Greg Such

After a short hiatus, the Club Aquarius Social Club is back! We have a special guest speaker joining us for the event. Greg Such has agreed to talk about diving in the Great Lakes as well as some other dives he has been on recently in Europe. He is a fascinating speaker with a number of fun and entertaining stories.

The Great Lake region is in his backyard (yes he is one of those people who lives above the Mason-Dixon Line by choice). He actually has a commercial dive vessel and takes divers out regularly. The cool thing is that the boat can be moved from one location to the other, so the dives can be quite varied.

I first met Greg in 2008 when we were both in the Red Sea for the new Sentinel Rebreather training with Kevin Gurr and Phil Short. We were the American contingent in a group that had instructors from the United Kingdom, Ireland, France, Italy, Malta, and Egypt. It turned out to be a fun week full of learning opportunities and sorting out issues with the first generation of the Sentinal rebreather.

When he is not diving, he is talking about diving. Greg is also a Sales Representative for Huish Outdoors the parent company of Atomic Aquatics, Zeagle Systems, Bare Sportswear, Stahlsac, Oceanic, and Hollis. Fortunately, Texas is in his territory.

And, if you are wondering, the meeting will be inside the store — it is too hot in Texas to be outside for long. So, this is your opportunity to come by and talk about diving, watch some diving, and hear about diving in other places.

We look forward to talking to everyone!

Tell me More and let me RSVP

Filed Under: Club Aquarius Tagged With: Club Aquarius, Great LAkes Diving

February 23, 2024 by Scott Singleton

Dive Site Geology Series – Revillagigedo Islands

Technically speaking Isla Socorro is one of the Revillagigedo Islands. However, it is the largest of the four islands that make up this island chain, the others consisting of San Benedicto, Roca Partida, and Clarion (Figure 1). But since ‘Revillagigedo’ is almost unpronounceable in English, most people merely refer to the island chain as the Socorro Islands.

The islands are a popular dive location due to their location as an isolated seamount in the open ocean, thus resulting in it being used by migratory and transient ocean-dwelling creatures. The principal animals passing through this chain are giant mantas, hammerhead sharks, whale sharks, and humpback whales. Resident large animals include silky sharks, Galapagos sharks, whitetip reef sharks, silvertip sharks, and bottlenose dolphins. The primary dive attraction is the giant mantas that cycle through to visit cleaning stations populated by abundant schools of jacks and other fish species. Supposedly the mantas are accustomed to divers and swim overhead so that diver bubbles tickle their undersides, which mimics the action of cleaner fish. All of this provides some pretty exciting dive adventures.

Some of the more inquisitive among us might ask why these remote islands are out in the middle of the deep ocean in the first place. Well, I’m glad you asked that question. Here, in installment 2 of my Dive Site Geology Series, I will explain how and why these islands are here. You can see the first Dive Site Geology article here.

The Socorro/Revillagigedo Hotspot

In a nutshell, the Socorro Islands are a hotspot within a relict mid-ocean spreading ridge. Now, let’s deconstruct that statement. Hotspots are a common feature in the deep ocean and even on land occasionally (Figure 2). They result from a plume of magma rising through the mantle, piercing the crust, and erupting on the earth’s surface (Wikipedia, 2024a). The most common example that Americans are familiar with is the Hawaiian Island chain (Figure 2). Chains such as the Hawaiian Islands do not look stationary because pieces of the earth’s crust are continually moving. This is known as plate tectonics. So as a particular plate moves past a hotspot, a chain of volcanoes will trace the direction and speed of movement of that crustal piece. In our particular case, notice how Clarion Island and Roca Partida are off to the west of San Benedicto and Socorro Islands. This traces the movement of this section of the earth’s crust.

As expected, Clarion Island and Roca Partida do not have recorded eruptions and are in the process of eroding and slowly sinking into the sea from the weight of rock on top of a relatively thin oceanic crust. This is a common occurrence that is well documented in the abundant volcanic island atolls of the southwest Pacific. Roca Partida in particular doesn’t have a very long life ahead of it since it currently only consists of two spires above the surface of the ocean (Figure 3).

The same cannot be said of San Benedicto and Socorro Islands. Mount Evermann on Socorro Island last erupted in 1993 with prior eruptions in 1951, 1905, 1896, and 1848. Vulcanologists think they can trace eruptions back at least to 3090 BC (+/- 500 years) (Wikipedia, 2024b). San Benedicto has two large craters, the southern of which is currently active. Its most recent eruption was in 1952 and was so large that it wiped out all life on the island. It has since been repopulated naturally by species from either the mainland or other islands, that is except for the San Benedicto rock wren which became extinct (there are other species of rock wren on other islands of this chain) (Wikipedia, 2024c).

The East Pacific Rise

The East Pacific Rise (EPR) is a divergent plate tectonic boundary, which means that new ocean crust is being created along its entire length and the crustal plates on either side are moving away (Wikipedia, 2024d) (Figure 4). In the Mexican portion of the EPR, the plate to the west is the Pacific Plate and to the east is the Cocos Plate. The Cocos Plate in turn is being subducted beneath the North American Plate in a feature known as the Middle America Trench (this is known as a ‘convergent’ plate tectonic boundary) due to the fact that the North American Plate is moving westward and will eventually completely consume the Cocos Plate.

Currently the EPR is located some distance to the east of the Socorro Islands (Figure 1). This is because 3.5 million years ago the EPR shifted to its current location, having previously been located directly underneath the Socorro Islands. Today this relict feature is known simply as Mathematicians Ridge. Lateral translation (or jumping) of spreading centers sometimes does occur due to reasons that are not well understood but are likely related to the fact that the oceanic crust is thin and weak in the vicinity of these spreading centers and if the mantle plumes feeding them shift slightly then the spreading center will also shift.

Geology (and dive experience) of the Socorro Islands

Let’s take a tour of what sights a diver might see when visiting these islands on a dive trip. Since the boats all come from Cabo San Lucas, the first island you reach will be San Benedicto. It is common to visit a popular site on the south end of the island called El Canyon (Figure 5). From the sheltered bay there you get a great view of the active volcano called Volcan Barcena (Figure 6). This barren landscape reminds one of being on the moon or some other similarly desolate place. The dives here are on volcanic rubble bottoms that have lots of fish but the primary attraction are the schools of sharks that make VERY close passes to divers (Figure 7) because we are associated with possible food handouts (not because we ARE food).

The Boiler

You might then be treated to a dive site on the other side of the island called The Boiler. Here is where you get your first chance to see giant mantas performing acrobatics above you. The pictures from here often have steep volcanic cliffs as a compositional element, which make for some very dramatic images (Figure 8). I’ve seen some company advertising literature framed on these volcanic walls, and for good reason (Figure 9)

Roco Partida

Next is Roca Partida. The time I went we spent two days diving on the same ‘rock’. That gives you an impression of what we thought of this isolated seamount in the middle of the Pacific. The underwater environment is very similar to The Boiler in that you swim around the seamount waiting for the mantas to show up. While you’re waiting there is lots of fish and sharks to photograph. Here you use the same compositional technique as you did previously by including rock outcrops on the seamount whenever possible (Figure 10). An additional world-famous ‘must-see’ picture from here is of resting white-tip reef sharks (Figure 11) which have the unique ability to lie on the bottom while sleeping, unlike most sharks that cannot breathe unless they are moving.

Socorro

Eventually, you make it to the southernmost island of Socorro, the largest island in the chain. Here the geology is very interesting because you see layered igneous stratigraphy wherever you look (Figure 12). There are two special things you might experience here. First is a night snorkel behind the boat with a whole herd of silky sharks just beneath the surface (they hunt flying fish, so the trick here is not to act like one so they don’t take a bite out of you). The second is a Zodiac ride to the rugged coastline where you go on a tour of the dramatic landscape up close and personal, which as you can imagine is like a kid in a candy store for a geologist (Figure 13).

This all adds up to an experience not to be missed in this lifetime.

Figure 13: The author on a Zodiac tour of the coastline on the northeast side of Socorro Island. The cliff face behind me consists of a layered series of volcanic ash flows interspersed with several basalt flows. There are at least two paleosols (ancient soil layer that was subsequently covered) that are indicated by a thin layer of orange. These represent quiescent periods between volcanic eruptions. (Photo by Eileen Singleton. Used with permission).
Figure 13: The author on a Zodiac tour of the coastline on the northeast side of Socorro Island. The cliff face behind me consists of a layered series of volcanic ash flows interspersed with several basalt flows. There are at least two paleosols (ancient soil layer that was subsequently covered) that are indicated by a thin layer of orange. These represent quiescent periods between volcanic eruptions. (Photo by Eileen Singleton. Used with permission).

References

Buck, W. R., C. Small, and W. B. F. Ryan (2009), Constraints on asthenospheric flow from the depths of oceanic spreading centers: The East Pacific Rise and the Australian-Antarctic Discordance. Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems, 10, Q09007, doi:10.1029/2009GC002373.

Wikipedia, 2024a: Hotspot (geology) – Wikipedia, accessed in February, 2024

Wikipedia, 2024b: Socorro Island – Wikipedia, accessed in February, 2024

Wikipedia, 2024c: Revillagigedo Islands – Wikipedia, accessed in February, 2024

Wikipedia, 2024c: East Pacific Rise – Wikipedia, accessed in February, 2024

Scott Singleton
Growing up in the wastelands of New Mexico Scott was surrounded by rocks and dirt but it wasn’t until he read Jules Vern’s Journey to the Center of the Earth that he began to see them as exciting! Knowing that the trip that Jules Vern described was somewhat impossible, Scott pursued Geophysics so he could see what was under the surface without leaving his air-conditioned trailer. Receiving his Bachelor of Science from the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology was the first step on his journey which continued through the oil fields of Texas, Oklahoma, and his beloved New Mexico. He later climbed higher receiving his Master’s Degree from Texas A&M University. When he isn’t looking for oil, Scott has become one of the leading experts on wood found in the fossil record in Texas. He recruited his entire family to help on these fossil hunting quests spending hours scrabbling over rocks and brush to find clues to the past. Never ones to sit still, the Singletons (Scott, Eileen and Loraine) discovered the world under the surface of the water, and all became scuba divers traveling to the far reaches of the earth photographing and videoing the underwater and surface scenes they encounter. He combines his love of rocks and fossils with his underwater adventures.

Filed Under: Marine Life Tagged With: Geology, marine life, Revillagigedo Islands, Socorro

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