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Denizens of the Deep: Alexander Semenov’s Pictures of Undersea Creatures

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Sea Creatures


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Growing up in Russia, Alexander Semenov was fascinated by the undersea world. For most of us, a few trips to the aquarium and the occasional scuba dive would be enough to scratch that itch. But Semenov has gone a little further. A 2007 graduate of Moscow State University, Semenov is a zoologist who works at the White Sea Biological Station (WSBS) in northwestern Russia, a major base for marine science research and sustainable coastal management. Semenov is chief of the diving team, which allows him to indulge his love of the deep. “When I had the opportunity to go diving and see all these things with my own eyes, it was like a dream come true,” he told me in an email. “This is another universe, very close to us.”

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Growing up in Russia, Alexander Semenov was fascinated by the undersea world. For most of us, a few trips to the aquarium and the occasional scuba dive would be enough to scratch that itch. But Semenov has gone a little further. A 2007 graduate of Moscow State University, Semenov is a zoologist who works at the White Sea Biological Station (WSBS) in northwestern Russia, a major base for marine science research and sustainable coastal management. Semenov is chief of the diving team, which allows him to indulge his love of the deep. “When I had the opportunity to go diving and see all these things with my own eyes, it was like a dream come true,” he told me in an email. “This is another universe, very close to us.”
But what sets Semenov apart is his ability behind a lens. He’s one of the best undersea photographers working today, and with his camera he’s been able to bring back images of that other universe, and the strange creatures that call it home. It isn’t easy—he points out that the conditions of taking photographs deep underwater can be technically complex. Some of the sealife he shoots are virtually transparent, and tiny—less than an inch in size. And of course, as a diver in the open water, Semenov is shooting without any support, simply floating in the water column. (Beginning scuba divers, like me, know how difficult it is to stay still and balanced underwater while on a dive.) And this is in water that’s only a few degrees above freezing, when visibility is only a few feet at most. He also shoots in laboratory settings, which can be seen in the shots that follow.

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