Thesis ID: CBB941740740

Seafloor Machina: Aging Technologies in the Depths of the Pacific Ocean (2023)

unapi

Everyone is talking about, reporting on, and studying the ocean, focusing on issues from sea level rise and pollution to coral reefs and algae blooms. Yet the piece we are missing in our study of the sea is understanding how we are industrializing the ocean floor, how the marine environment is responding to that industrialization, and how our present-day society cannot function without the manipulation, engineering, and management of machines on the seabed. By combining historical, primary source research with present-day marine science, this study offers one of the first environmental histories of the ocean floor. The dissertation analyzes the development of three seafloor industries in the northeast Pacific Ocean from the 1890s into the present day, including oil and gas drilling in the shoreline, telecommunications cables on the continental shelf, and cabled observatories in the abyss. These industries have become indispensable to onshore society: offshore drilling accounts for approximately 30 percent of the globe’s supply of oil; undersea cables facilitate 98 percent of all Internet and international phone traffic; and cabled observatories are scientific instruments at the forefront of collecting marine data that can help to prepare society for earthquakes, tsunamis, and the effects of climate change. Fixed seabed infrastructure has become one of the most important ways that humans are interacting with the ocean, just as fisheries have been to previous generations. I argue that the industrialization of the northeast Pacific’s seabed has resulted in a persistent interaction between marine life and machines. Within months of entering the seawater, marine life colonizes seafloor technologies and transforms them into habitat, a transition I refer to as the machine’s biotic afterlife. The biotic afterlife marks not only the decades or centuries the machine will spend in the sea but also its integration into the seafloor’s ecology. Once these machines have spent years, decades, and now centuries in the ocean, what to do with them—to remove, or not to remove?—is the underlying question that drives this dissertation. Ultimately, as this research shows, the removal of machines from the seabed is often a political decision, rather than an ecological one.

...More
Citation URI
data.isiscb.org/p/isis/citation/CBB941740740

This citation is part of the Isis database.

Similar Citations

Book Kristin A. Wintersteen; (2021)
The Fishmeal Revolution: The Industrialization of the Humboldt Current Ecosystem (/p/isis/citation/CBB521708008/) unapi

Article Russell, Andrew; (2006)
Telecommunications Standards in the Second and Third Industrial Revolutions (/p/isis/citation/CBB001033906/) unapi

Book Nicole Starosielski; (2015)
The Undersea Network (/p/isis/citation/CBB010467337/) unapi

Book Pradip Thomas; (2019)
Empire and Post-empire Telecommunications in India: A History (/p/isis/citation/CBB919551516/) unapi

Article Benson, Keith Rodney; (2015)
Marine Biology, Intertidal Ecology, and a New Place for Biology (/p/isis/citation/CBB001510257/) unapi

Article Jones, Ryan Tucker; (2013)
Running into Whales: The History of the North Pacific from below the Waves (/p/isis/citation/CBB001212531/) unapi

Book Cushman, Gregory T.; (2013)
Guano and the Opening of the Pacific World: A Global Ecological History (/p/isis/citation/CBB001202077/) unapi

Article Madureira, Nuno Luís; (2010)
Oil in the Age of Steam (/p/isis/citation/CBB001421529/) unapi

Book Helen L. Godfrey; (October 2018)
Submarine telegraphy and the hunt for gutta percha : Challenge and opportunity in a global trade (/p/isis/citation/CBB871723291/) unapi

Article Cookson, Gillian; (2006)
Submarine Cables: Novelty and Innovation, 1850--1870 (/p/isis/citation/CBB000720098/) unapi

Article Tully, John; (2009)
A Victorian Ecological Disaster: Imperialism, the Telegraph, and Gutta-Percha (/p/isis/citation/CBB001030428/) unapi

Book MacLeod, Roy M.; (1999)
Science and the Pacific War: Science and survival in the Pacific, 1939-1945 (/p/isis/citation/CBB000112101/) unapi

Book Jim Bennett; (2017)
Navigation: A Very Short Introduction (/p/isis/citation/CBB761811804/) unapi

Article Damien F. G. Minenna; Frédéric André; Yves Elskens; Jean-François Auboin; Fabrice Doveil; Jérôme Puech; Élise Duverdier; (2019)
The traveling-wave tube in the history of telecommunication (/p/isis/citation/CBB645809457/) unapi

Article Fletcher, Amy L.; (2002)
France Enters the Information Age: A Political History of Minitel (/p/isis/citation/CBB000200134/) unapi

Book Brinson, Susan L.; (2002)
Personal and Public Interests: Frieda B. Hennock and the Federal Communications Commission (/p/isis/citation/CBB000201751/) unapi

Book Lamoreaux, Naomi R.; Sokoloff, Kenneth Lee; (2007)
Financing Innovation in the United States, 1870 to the Present (/p/isis/citation/CBB000774188/) unapi

Authors & Contributors
Bennett, Jim
Benson, Keith Rodney
Bluma, Lars
Brinson, Susan L.
Cookson, Gillian
Cushman, Gregory Todd
Journals
American Antiquity
American Historical Review
European Physical Journal H
History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences
History and Technology
Icon: Journal of the International Committee for the History of Technology
Publishers
Oxford University Press
Cambridge University Press
Brill
Duke University Press
Kluwer Academic
MIT Press
Concepts
Technology
Telecommunications
Cable, submarine
Telegraphs; telephones
Industrialization
Ecology
People
Hennock, Frieda Barkin
Whitehouse, Edward Orange Wildman
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
21st century
20th century, early
20th century, late
18th century
Places
Pacific Ocean
United States
Chile
India
California (U.S.)
Southeast Asia
Institutions
United States Federal Communications Commission
International Business Machines Corporation
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment