R.I.P., Mighty O
A fabled aircraft carrier sunk deliberately off the coast of Florida is the world's largest artificial reef
- By Geoffrey Norman
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2006, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
The next morning, Travis Allinson, a salvage diver who had worked for three years to ready the ship for its sinking, strapped on his tanks and went in the water, 24 miles southeast of Pensacola. The bottom was 212 feet below him; the Oriskany's superstructure, just over 60 feet. The site, though it is managed by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, is unmarked (its GPS coordinates are public knowledge). Which is how divers want it. "The visibility was OK for the first 20 or 30 feet," Allinson said of that first dive on the world's largest artificial reef, "and, then, when I got down on the ship, it cleared up until you could just see forever. And it was perfect. She was sitting up just like she was supposed to. I looked around, and there were a couple of remoras following me. So the fish were already finding her. She was doing what we'd put her down there to do. It was definitely the right way to go. Now she has a whole new life."
Geoffrey Norman is the author of 15 books, including Bouncing Back, about the POW experience in Vietnam.
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Comments
jan. 2, 2008 What is the status of the 'O' as a reef for fish ? what varieties of fish have been recorded ?
Posted by Robert J. Courtney, M.D. on January 2,2008 | 09:15 PM