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These are the first broadcast quality images coming from manned submersibles deep beneath the Indian Ocean.
The British-led scientific mission is documenting changes happening in one of the world's least explored areas.
The descent into Seychelles waters is a world-first scientific and broadcasting breakthrough
The Associated Press is able to transmit the pictures through the waves using the blue region of the electromagnetic spectrum.
The first transmission came from 60 meters (200 feet) down.
Previous deep sea livestreams cataloguing the world's oceans have been via fiber optic cable.
The Nekton researchers have been dealing with monsoon storms and fierce underwater currents as they begin their scientific work in earnest.
Marine scientists in two submersibles make a historic dive to document changes in the Indian Ocean.
The first stage of the mission involves surveying the ocean at a depth of around 200 feet.
The submersibles transmit real-time video to the surface by new wireless technology that uses the electromagnetic spectrum.
Previous video transmissions from the oceans' depths used fibre-optic cables.
Scientists are examining corals to evaluate the effect of the ocean's currents.
Future dives will take the underwater craft to depths of around 1,000 feet off the Alphonse Atoll in the Seychelles.