[00:01.66]When they returned two years later[00:03.84]they found a creature, entirely new to science,[00:07.32]that amazingly was feeding on the whale bones.[00:13.45]I'm joining the museum's Adrian Glover,[00:16.41]the man who first broke news of the new species,[00:19.33]as he heads back to sea for further investigations.[00:24.36]About six years ago the whale was sunk, well, what're you expecting to see?[00:28.09]What's left of it today, do you reckon?[00:29.87]We're expecting hopefully to see bones there, sitting like a reef-like structure on the seabed, so we hope.[00:35.32]Hopefully it's not been completely buried or washed away.[00:38.29]Well, hopefully we'll find it. I mean, you never know these things[00:40.47]Oh, we wanted, not even find it?[00:41.80]No, no, I didn't say that.[00:42.75]Oh, no.[00:44.30]I really hope we do find this whale skeleton[00:47.37]because it's the only place Adrian has any hope of collecting the peculiar species he's recently discovered.[00:55.64]Once the boat's in the right spot it's up to the submersible or ROV - to go on its search.[01:02.10]It's all done by remote control.