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Fluorescent-eyed fish and ancient volcanic cones are among the amazing discoveries of a new expedition that mapped a section of  the Indian Ocean. 

Researchers recently completed a 35-day expedition around the Cocos Islands, an archipelago southwest of the Indonesian island of Sumatra. The islands are now the center of the Cocos (Keeling) Islands Marine Park, a 180,330 square-mile (467,054 square kilometers) protected area that has never before been mapped in high resolution. According to the Museums Victoria Research Institute (opens in new tab) , the mapping revealed underwater mountain peaks and weird marine life, such as a blind, gelatinous eel that was previously unknown to science.

“The fish are the standout deep-sea fashionistas,” expedition chief scientist Tim O’Hara (opens in new tab) of the Museums Victoria Research Institute told Live Science in an email. “They come in all shapes and sizes, with light organs, lures, rays modified into tripods or camouflage appendages, and huge (or missing) eyes. Each species superbly adapted to the extreme deep-sea environments.” Mountainous territory 

The tiny Cocos Islands, also known as the Keeling Islands after the British sea captain who first reported their existence in 1609, are a pair of atolls made up of 27 coral islands. The islands are actually the peaks of two enormous seamounts. 

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The new mapping revealed that a smaller rise is snuggled between these peaks, and sits 1,148 feet (350 meters) below sea level, according to the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization of Australia (CSIRO). 

“It’s truly an honour to see, for the first time, these stunning underwater features revealed from the deep,” Nelson Kuna, a hydrographic surveyor from CSIRO who was on the research expedition, said in a blog post about the findings (opens in new tab) . 

Until now, scientists had only a fuzzy understanding of this undersea topography from satellite data. 

“Some seamounts predicted to be shallow had subsided into the deep-sea, others had cones or drowned reefs that almost reached the surface. The sheer size of some of the features was amazing,” O’Hara said. 

For example, the Muirfield Seamount, which was discovered in 1973 when a British cargo vessel rammed into it, turned out to be 43.5 miles (70 kilometers) across and 2.8 miles (4.5 km) high. Deep-sea life 

The researchers collected footage and samples of the complex web of life around the atolls. They found the blind eels 3.1 miles (5 km) below the surface. In those depths, the scientists also found an array of bizarre fish, including tribute spiderfish (Bathypterois guentheri), which have weird, elongated fins that act like stilts, enabling the fish to perch above the ocean floor and capture small crustaceans as they drift by. 

A tribute spiderfish (Bathypterois guentheri), which uses its long, stilt-like fins to prop it off the ocean floor. (Image credit: Courtesy Museums Victoria)

The scientists also observed pelican eels (Eurypharynx pelecanoides), which have huge, loosely hinged jaws that enable them to swallow prey bigger than themselves, and toothy Sloane’s viperfish (Chauliodus sloani), which have mouths bristling with needle-sharp  teeth and light-up organs along their sides to attract prey. Also at home in  the marine protected area are highfin lizardfish (Bathysaurus mollis), deepwater bottom-feeders whose reproductive organs combine ovaries and testes — both are reproductively active at the same time. Related stories—Sinkholes as big as a skyscraper and as wide as a city street open up in the Arctic seafloor

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“The sheer diversity of the invertebrate fauna was also spectacular,” O’Hara said. “We collected every family of black corals, and hundreds of species of crustaceans and echinoderms. Many of these species will be new to science.”

Future expeditions will collect free-floating DNA from the waters, another way to hunt for biodiversity. For now, O’Hara said, expedition scientists and their colleagues plan to identify and catalog the flora and fauna they discovered on their exploration of the region. 

“We still have much to learn about these vast areas,” O’Hara said.