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Thu, Dec

Imaging 100-Year-Old Shipwrecks Under 800 Feet of Water

Offshore Engineer
Jerry Eliason, a lifelong shipwreck hunter from Cloquet, Minnesota, has become one of the most respected figures in the quest to locate and document lost ships beneath the depths of the Great

Jerry Eliason, a lifelong shipwreck hunter from Cloquet, Minnesota, has become one of the most respected figures in the quest to locate and document lost ships beneath the depths of the Great Lakes. Eliason’s decades-long dedication and innovative use of technology have led to some of the region’s most significant underwater discoveries, including the Henry B. Smith and the record-breaking Scotiadoc wrecks.

A critical enabler of Eliason’s work has been his use of specialized imaging tools tailored for extreme underwater environments. Chief among these is Theia Technologies’ MY125M ultra-wide no-distortion lens, which plays a central role in capturing clear, expansive visuals of deep-water wreck sites. Its ability to deliver wide-angle coverage without introducing geometric distortion is essential for documenting the often vast and structurally complex wrecks resting hundreds of feet below the surface. Combined with custom underwater housings and remote-operated camera rigs, the MY125M allows Eliason and his fellow shipwreck enthusiasts to deliver visually compelling and historically significant documentation of shipwrecks unseen for over a century

Early Beginnings and Technical Evolution

Jerry’s passion for shipwreck exploration began as a child inspired by the 1960s TV show Sea Hunt. After relocating to Wisconsin in 1964, he purchased diving gear and started scuba

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