Arcturus expedition
The Arcturus expedition was a six-month-long research expedition from New York, to the Sargasso Sea, Cocos Island, and finally, the Galápagos Islands. The expedition occurred in 1925 on the Arcturus vessel. The expedition included six female explorers.
Vessel
The Arcturus vessel was supported by the New York Zoological Society, and the expedition was the first oceanographic mission backed by the organization. The vessel was a steam yacht with eight data collection lines hanging in the water. The yacht weighed twenty-four hundred tons and was powered by coal. The data collection methods attached to the lines included surface nets, an otter trawl, vertical nets, plankton nets, a Peterson trawl, a dredge, tangles, sounding, a water bottle, and a thermometer. The vessel also included a platform for researchers to access the surface water more easily.Henry D. Whiton provided the vessel, and Harrison Williams provided three-fourths of the expedition cost.
Crew
The leader of the Arcturus expedition was William Beebe, and the expedition drew attention due to the presence of women on board as crew members. Beebe said of the female crew members: "If it were feasible, I would have my entire scientific party made up of , just as readily as not. Fine minds are as necessary in modern research exploration as fine courage. It is easier to find fine women than fine men." The six female researchers, writers, and artists made essential contributions to the expedition two generations before it was commonplace for female scientists to be aboard research vessels.The female crew members of the Arcturus expedition were Isabel Cooper, Marie Poland Fish, Ruth Rose, Lillian Segal, Helen Tee-Van, and Elizabeth S. Trotter. Cooper was a science artist and had previously worked with Beebe on a project for the New York Zoological Society. Poland Fish was an oceanographer and marine biologist who worked for the United States Bureau of Fisheries prior to the Arcturus expedition and eventually assisted with the founding of the Narragansett Marine Laboratory at the University of Rhode Island, along with being awarded the U.S. Navy Distinguished Service Medal. Rose was a writer and historian who documented the expedition in "The Arcturus Adventure" with Beebe. Segal was a biological chemist who investigated bioluminescence in deep-sea fish. Tee-Van was a science artist for the Zoological Society, and Trotter was a fisheries scientist who focused on vertebrate study during the expedition.