Yes! More sea-floor laboratories! I posted just last week about a somewhat similar plan for Monterey submarine canyon. This one is in the northeastern Pacific Ocean, offshore of BC, Washington, and Oregon.
Here are the highlights from this article in ScienceDaily:
NEPTUNE (North-East Pacific Time-Series Undersea Networked Experiments) is a joint U.S.-Canada venture led by the University of Victoria in Canada and the University of Washington in the United States.
Located in the northeast Pacific on the active Juan de Fuca tectonic plate.
NEPTUNE will allow scientists to monitor biological, oceanographic and geological processes over a period that could stretch to more than two decades.
Six unmanned sea floor nodes, each roughly the size of a sport utility vehicle and each hosting an array of instruments, equipment and video cameras will be installed on the ocean floor in Canadian waters.
The first stage of NEPTUNE is scheduled to start in summer 2008.
Let's hope their equipment doesn't get destroyed by a turbidity current.....on the other hand....we could use the data :)