

Shot was taken with a SeaLife DC500 with a single strobe attached. The human machine feeds itself what it needs without consideration of the future, a great disappointment which will sadly be felt by the people my age. Despite the fact that corals have survived ancient times till now, with meteor collisions and ice ages, we have managed to wreak havoc upon the reefs in the span of couple hundred years. It originally was used with a Sealife DC500.It does ch.from. It is sad to think that chances are we are going to kill all of them within the next hundred years. SL 96010 for Sea Life Underwater Cameras.It says it fits all Reefmaster Land and Sea Cameras. These reefs are so vital to the ecology of the entire planet. The camera uses SD memory cards and a small rechargable battery. It has no specific manual controls for setting aperture and shutterspeed, instead using a number of preconfigured modes to set the aperture, shutterspeed, white balance, etc. It swam up underneath me, scaring me so much I couldn't move, and then drifted back down into the rocks to find something more interesting. The DC500 is an ultra-compact 5 megapixel camera designed for point and shoot photography. Seeing coral formations of porites which have survived hundreds, possibly thousands of years, creating islands with gorgonians, sponge, and other exotics.Īt this same spot, the year before, I encountered a green moray eel, somewhere around eight feet long, with a mouth large enough to bite a basketball. It isn't enough to keep me away from it though. Like I've said before, the initial jump in the water has always been a little unnerving for me because I know what kinds of things live within the oceans, more particularly the reefs.
