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  • Tags: cleaning sponges

http://exhibits.lib.usf.edu/files/original/2230d384f7ac485ddadb07bffdd55468.jpg
A crew member finishes the grueling job of cleaning sponges on February 11, 1975. Sponges, which are simple animal organisms, must be cleaned of their skin, internal matter, and any stones or sand that have adhered to them. Crew members repeatedly…

http://exhibits.lib.usf.edu/files/original/2422c0c20c9277cc85b2c67ef27f9e55.jpg
Niki Samarkos hangs finger sponges to dry on October 28, 1966. Most sponges harvested by the fishermen have some kind of personal or industrial use, but finger sponges are purely decorative.

http://exhibits.lib.usf.edu/files/original/76e9405a230f2e2883e27980d82c2f7e.jpg
Back in port, the crew finishes cleaning and sorting sponges for auction on October 10, 1969. Cleaning the animals entails allowing their skins to decompose, rinsing them with water and squeezing them to eliminate internal matter and bits of skin,…
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