Malaspina Expedition: Pausing in Perth

S 32° 3’ 0″ E 115° 43’ 58″ Broken electronics sit on a shelf in one of the laboratories on the Hespérides, awaiting repair. Finger bones smashed by errant sampling bottles are knitting nicely, the medic says. And supplies ordered last week before we lost our main satellite connection await the ship in port. The … Continue reading Malaspina Expedition: Pausing in Perth

Malaspina expedition: Cosmopolis of specialists

S 30° 19’ 58″ E 103° 18’ 31″ – The showers overflow when the ship rolls. Lunch often resembles the previous night’s dinner, and one researcher slouched on the sofa in the scientist’s lounge grumbles, “My four-year-old and her friends party more than this.” So much for quality of life. But the location and neighbors … Continue reading Malaspina expedition: Cosmopolis of specialists

Malaspina expedition: Not an obsession

S 29° 36’ 4″ E 95° 00’ 33″ – One winter’s evening in Callao, in Spain’s viceroyalty of Perú, Luis Née packed his botanical equipment for a voyage. The 59-year-old botanist had arrived in Perú with the Malaspina expedition from Australia in late July 1793. The Descubierta would continue through the Strait of Magellan to … Continue reading Malaspina expedition: Not an obsession

Malaspina expedition: Persistent pollutant pursuers

S 29° 48’ 2″ E 82° 42’ 50″ – A dorado shimmers below the surface, flitting its radioactive blue fins and flicking its yellow tail as it circles a vertical net dangling from the Hespérides. The dorado is the largest animal we have seen since leaving the African coast. It might see our nets as … Continue reading Malaspina expedition: Persistent pollutant pursuers