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Kimberly Roberson, research coordinator for Gray's Reef National Marine Sanctuary, foreground, and Justin Miyano, vessel operations coordinator, surface after scuba diving in the sanctuary Monday, Oct. 28, 2019, off the coast of Savannah, Ga. The site is named after Milton "Sam" Gray, a biologist who studied it in the 1960s and identified it as an ecosystem worth saving _ a reef not far from the U.S. coast that teemed with life, especially an "abundance of diversity of invertebrates," says Roberson. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

Kimberly Roberson, research coordinator for Gray's Reef National Marine Sanctuary, foreground, and Justin Miyano, vessel operations coordinator, surface after scuba diving in the sanctuary Monday, Oct. 28, 2019, off the coast of Savannah, Ga. The site is named after Milton "Sam" Gray, a biologist who studied it in the 1960s and identified it as an ecosystem worth saving _ a reef not far from the U.S. coast that teemed with life, especially an "abundance of diversity of invertebrates," says Roberson. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)

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