Pequod. An  underwater observation surface vessel. Loch Morar, 1975  
                 
                Pequod was  a small ‘glass-bottomed’ boat we used  in 1975 to survey 200 miles of Loch Morar shoreline for unusual bones.  
                 
                She was a small boat, 8ft long with a 2 h.p. engine  and a crew of two. The helmsman sat to the rear and an observer lay in a  central coffin shaped channel, 9ins below the waterline, looking through a  transparent acrylic dome.  
                 
                The vessel was towed to the survey location by a  support boat and then moved in and out from the shoreline. We could see down to  approximately 10m and saw many bones and as many beer cans! 
                 
                When bones were  recovered subsequently by scuba-diving, they all turned out to be from sheep and  deer. However, the mission gave us valuable insight into the shallow water  habitats around the loch. 
                 
                 
                
              Rquiring a helmsman and an observer filming through the dome.  
               
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                ©A and M SHINE
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                Pequod and Adrian Shine- 
                Note the transparent viewing dome.  
                 
                 
                 
                  
                 
                Excellent close ups of shallow water habitats without getting wet!  
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