Diving into icy waters
Photos by Brenda Konar
ÀÖ»¢Ö±²¥ College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences faculty member Stephen Jewett pioneered the first university cold-water diving program in the late 1980s.
The UA Scientific Diving program was started in 1988 to address a growing need for scientific divers for industry and academic research around the state. But at first, the small program was limited to professional training, and unable to offer student programs as well.
Striving to fill this void, Brenda Konar expanded the program in 2000 to include the first ÀÖ»¢Ö±²¥ cold-water scientific diving course, which was taught out of the Fairbanks campus. Although similarly structured diving programs existed around the country, this became the first university program to focus on tactics for successful cold-water scientific diving.
Since then, the program has expanded its cold-water training opportunities, and now offers multiple courses that involve scientific diving and various subtidal research projects. Many of these courses are taught out of the Kasitsna Bay Laboratory near Seldovia, which is owned by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and operated by UAF.
Students trained by the UA scientific diving program have become a major force in the ÀÖ»¢Ö±²¥-wide scientific diving industry, with projects in Southeast ÀÖ»¢Ö±²¥, the Aleutian Islands, Cook Inlet, the Gulf of ÀÖ»¢Ö±²¥, and the Beaufort and Chukchi seas.
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