In 1971, the object was identified as
Chondrocladia concrescens, a species of carnivorous
sponge, by Bruce C. Heezen and Charles D. Hollister in their book
The Face of the Deep. The book reproduces the photograph taken by the USNS
Eltanin as well as a redrawn version of a drawing by
Alexander Agassiz which originally appeared in his 1888
Three Cruises of the Blake. Hollister and Heezen describe
Cladorhiza concrescens as a sponge which "somewhat resembles a space-age microwave antenna", while Agassiz described the sponges as having "a long stem ending in ramifying roots, sunk deeply into the mud. The stem has nodes with four to six club-like appendages. They evidently cover like bushes extensive tracts of the bottom." The identification was largely unknown outside
marine biology circles until 2003, when a discussion of the Eltanin Antenna on a UFO mailing list caused researcher Tom DeMary to contact A. F. Amos, an oceanographer who had been aboard the USNS
Eltanin in the 1960s. Amos referred DeMary to the Hezeen and Hollister book for further information, after which DeMary published scans of the sponge drawings online. ==References==