Image
Night Spins
January 28, 2007In the middle of a summer night, researchers working from the research vessel Oceanus deploy a sampling sled to detect chemical tracers that helped them track how an eddy mixes water layers of the ocean. Eddies are the oceanic equivalent of a hurricane a huge mass of water spinning like a whirlpool, moving through the ocean for months, stretching across tens to hundreds of miles, and stirring up a vortex of water and material from the depths to the surface. (Photo by David Ciochetto, Dalhousie University)
TOPICS: Currents, Gyres, & Eddies / How the Ocean Works
Image and Visual Licensing
WHOI copyright digital assets (stills and video) contained on this website can be licensed for non-commercial use upon request and approval. Please contact WHOI Digital Assets at images@whoi.edu or (508) 289-2647.