| ARTICLE INFORMATION: Author: Howard Norfolk Title: A Photographic Visit to the Seattle Aquarium Summary: The Seattle Aquarium's exhibits are focussed upon demonstrating the marine life of the Pacific Northwest, and the importance of conserving it. Contact for editing purposes: email: hownorf@aquarticles.com Date first published: July 2004 Publication: Original to Aquarticles Reprinted from Aquarticles: |
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A Photographic Visit to the Seattle Aquarium in July 2004 by Howard Norfolk Seattle is a port city on the Pacific Ocean in Washington State, Northwest USA. It is the home of the Boeing Aircraft Company and also the Microsoft Corporation. Bill Gates was brought up here and built a lavish home (variously valued at up to US$97 million) in a prosperous suburb on the shores of Lake Washington. Visitors to Seattle can get a bird's eye view of the city from the top of the 605' (184 m.) Space Needle, which was built for the Seattle World's Fair of 1962.
CLICK ON PHOTOGRAPHS FOR ENLARGEMENTS, THEN GO "BACK."
Seattle's nickname is "The Rainy City" and sure enough it rained the morning I took these photos (July 3, 2004). But by the time I came down from the Space Needle and made my way to the Aquarium it was clearing up nicely and it ended up to be a sunny day: The people of Seattle have worked and played near the sea ever since the city's foundation in the late 1850s, but Seattle did not have a public aquarium until the early 1960s, when home heating-oil magnate Ted Griffin opened his Seattle Marine Aquarium at the end of Pier 66. This included crowd-pleasing killer whale and seal shows. The shows were discontinued in the mid 1970s when concerns of environmentalists caused the Federal Government to ban the capture of wild Orca. Soon afterwards the new Seattle Aquarium was opened, on May 20, 1977. It receives 600,000 visitors per year. Let's take a tour:
...There are four main types of public aquarium: The Seattle Aquarium is very much one of the latter. It is run by the Seattle Aquarium Society, a non-profit organisation whose aim is to "educate the public about Puget Sound's marine environment, the conservation challenges facing it, and science-based strategies for its preservation."
Past the entrance, a large hall contains Life on the Edge, opened in May 2002 as the Aquarium's '25th Anniversary present to the community':
Life of a Drifter is an exhibit opened in May 2003:
A departure from local temperate exhibits is the Pacific Coral Reef. A 25,000 gallon community tank has a variety of warm-water fish including sharks, and there are some nice jewel tanks:
From here, visitors pass through to Building 2, a modern cement structure built in 1977 to illustrate more aspects of the Pacific Northwest environment:
Cycle of Life display: Pacific salmon are born in freshwater rivers and streams where they spend their first year or two. They then move out into the open ocean to feed and grow, and when mature they return to their home streams to spawn and die.
The Seattle Aquarium successfully replicates coho and chum salmon species' life cycles on the premises. Eggs are taken from adults and hatched into fry. They are reared to a suitable size and then are gradually converted to saltwater and released into the ocean. A few years later they unerringly return to the exact place they were born, and climb up the Aquarium's fish ladders. They are taken to a maturing pond to adjust to freshwater and ripen. Eggs are stripped from the females and mixed with sperm from the males, and the cycle begins again.
A corridor leads to Puget Sound Fish, where saltwater fishes of the Northwest are displayed.
The Seattle Aquarium's most spectacular exhibit is the Underwater Dome, where visitors descend through two tunnels into a round room that is built inside a 400,000 gallon fish tank. The tank contains salmon, ling cod, sharks, sturgeon, halibut, skates and rockfish.
The Underwater Dome room can be rented for private functions in evenings when the Aquarium is closed. Special lighting at night provides an 'ethereal experience', and chamber music concerts, weddings, and wedding receptions are held here. At least one wedding has actually taken place underwater! Climbing back up from the Dome, visitors pass the Marine Mammals exhibits:
Back inside, the Marshroom offers a small space where young children can play and 'learn about the importance of watersheds': The final exhibit is Sound to Mountains, which 'follows a single drop of water from the top of a mountain to the depths of the ocean, demonstrating the importance of the stream-side habitats along the way'.
So much information! The Seattle Aquarium takes its mission statement 'Inspiring conservation of our marine environment' very seriously, and I felt quite overwhelmed by the amount of thoughts I was expected to absorb. At the end of my visit it was nice to relax and stroll around the Seattle Aquarium Store without being expected to learn or worry about anything more!
The Seattle Aquarium fits a lot of original and thought-provoking exhibits into its inevitably constricted downtown space. With 600,000 visitors each year it calls itself the largest 'retail' point of education about Puget Sound's marine environment and the importance of conserving it. There is a growing movement to build a bigger and better world-class aquarium in Seattle. I'll visit again when they build it! The Seattle Aquarium's web site is at: http://www.seattleaquarium.org |