Just have a look at a few of this undersea wonderland’s residents, photographed during the Okeanos Explorer’s Northeast U.S. Canyons Expedition in 2013, and tell me you don’t want to pack up your scuba gear and find your own little seamount to settle down on tomorrow:

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That, however, won’t be possible. Today’s designation places this slice of the oceanic paradise beyond the reach of humans, be they commercial fishermen, deep ocean miners, or pragmatic apocalypse preppers. And honestly, the oceans deserve a little space from humanity. They already provide us with an endless bounty of seafood, and soak up most of the atmospheric heat we’ve produce by burning fossil fuels. We’ve paid them in kind by killing everything that swims, dumping lots of soda bottles, and continuing to fill the skies with climate-warming carbon.

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In fact, that’s part of the reason this reserve has now come into existence—a recent NOAA study projected that temperatures off New England’s coast are rising three times faster than the global average. As much as possible, we need to build resiliency in parts of the ocean that are threatened by climate change. Obama understands this, and I can only hope his successor does, too.

[The White House, NOAA]