Dear followers of Hyperborea
Exists, it’s been over a month since I last wrote. It seems that the gods are
determined to prevent me updating the blog more regularly but fear not, sooner
or later I’ll always be back in touch. The truth must be discovered. In
my last post I started to tell the story of how I really became involved in the
Hyperborea myth. Here is the second part.
As I explained, on 7 June 2000 I set forth from Bodø in northern Norway aboard the Blue Sea with Geir Grønvoll and Olve Raaen, my colleagues from the NTNU. Geir is a renowned expert in submarine ecosystems and Olve specialises in applied robotics. Olve was in charge of Barracuda 1 and 2, the submarine robots that would reveal first-hand what lay in the murky depths. I was involved in the expedition as an expert in submarine archaeology, just in case we discovered any remains along the proposed route. It was rather like building a motorway. Before you can begin, first you have to study the environmental impact and check whether or not the work will affect any archaeological remains.
As I explained, on 7 June 2000 I set forth from Bodø in northern Norway aboard the Blue Sea with Geir Grønvoll and Olve Raaen, my colleagues from the NTNU. Geir is a renowned expert in submarine ecosystems and Olve specialises in applied robotics. Olve was in charge of Barracuda 1 and 2, the submarine robots that would reveal first-hand what lay in the murky depths. I was involved in the expedition as an expert in submarine archaeology, just in case we discovered any remains along the proposed route. It was rather like building a motorway. Before you can begin, first you have to study the environmental impact and check whether or not the work will affect any archaeological remains.
Descriptive diagram of the elements that configure a submarine cable system. |
On this project we
didn’t expect to find anything significant because the route was a long way
away from all standard maritime routes and there were no records of any
shipwrecks in the area. However, international regulations meant that these
checks were compulsory. As you can imagine, my expectations were low. In fact,
of the three of us, I was the only one who didn’t expect to find much. Greir
was the most enthusiastic because the expedition served as the perfect excuse
for him to closely observe marine environments that he would never have been
able to study otherwise. The cost would have been prohibitive, after all, we’re
talking about depths that range between ten and thirteen thousand feet.
The first week was
fairly routine. Our route was north-northeast for six hundred nautical miles,
at which point we would turn east-southeast until we reached Iceland. A direct
route east had been ruled out because Nordic Communications hoped that this
cable would be the first of two. The second cable would connect to Greenland.
The point where we changed direction would be the location for an
interconnector that would one day function as a bridge between Iceland,
Greenland and the continent.
Submarine cable. During our surveys we deployed hundreds of kilometers of Steel guide cable. This photo was taken by Barracuda 1, one of the two underwater robots that we used during this Project. |
We woke up between
5 and 6 am each morning to start work just as the first rays of sunlight
appeared over the horizon. Our routine was to move from waypoint to waypoint
releasing the Barracuda robots at each location and observing the ocean floor
and environment to assess the viability of the ‘path’. If a waypoint proved to
be viable, the next waypoint was assigned and the Nordic Comms team released
the steel guide cable. This guide cable would be used to lay the real cable
once we had finished our job.
Among our
observations, we focused on the following aspects: local fauna and flora, rock
and coral formations and, for my part, any traces of archaeological remains.
The Barracuda robots made our work far easier. Before they were invented, we
would have had to carry out highly dangerous dives in pressurized suits. Or
simply omit on-site checks, so that the workers who laid the cable would be
unaware of any damage that they could cause. That first week was fairly calm
and without incident. Things started to get interesting in the second
week.