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Women’s History Month at WHOI

Women's History Month at WHOI

TrailblazersJoanne Malkus was the first female meteorologist to earn a doctorate, discovered what keeps hurricanes moving forward, and revealed what drives the atmospheric currents in the tropics. As a research…

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Women’s History Month at WHOI

Women's History Month at WHOI

TrailblazersAt 14, Mitzi Crane fell in love with Jacques Cousteau, which inspired her to study marine biology and French in college. After several years in banking, a well-timed seminar in…

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Ready for a Closeup

Ready for a Closeup

A camera attached to the bottom of a multicore caught this view of seafloor organisms and a pink dumbo octopus right before the instrument reached the bottom. A multicore drives…

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Going, Going, Gone

Going, Going, Gone

An ice-tethered profiler (ITP) takes one last look at the sky before passing through four meters of ice in the Beaufort Sea to begin a study of ocean physics, biology,…

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Coral Archives

Coral Archives

Researchers Paul Henderson (left) and Luis Vasquez-Bedoya collect coral samples from a large reef in the waters off Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula. Corals build their skeletons over time from calcium carbonate and…

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Recovered Treasure

Recovered Treasure

MIT-WHOI Joint Program student Alec Bogdanoff (top), student intern Anna Hadartz (center), third mate Mike Chretian (right) and WHOI engineer Ken Decoteau (bottom) return to R/V Knorr after recovering a yellow Slocum…

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Deep Waters, Not Still

Deep Waters, Not Still

WHOI technicians John Kemp (blue hat) and Jim Ryder (red hat) work with two Coast Guard crewmen from the ice breaker Healy to deploy a “long-ranger” acoustic doppler current profiler…

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The True Bosun

The True Bosun

What happens on the deck and over the side of a research vessel happens under the watchful eyes of the bosun. Ever since R/V Atlantis sailed on its maiden voyage…

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Women’s History Month at WHOI

Women's History Month at WHOI

Students Unlike Kathy Burns‘ class of 1975, the 2010 graduates of the MIT-WHOI Joint program reflect current trends in the demographics of graduate students at the Institution, with women accounting…

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Women’s History Month at WHOI

Women's History Month at WHOI

Students After the MIT-WHOI Joint Program was formed in 1968, it took 2 years for the first female students to arrive. Kathy Burns came to Woods Hole in 1970 and…

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Profiles in Currents

Profiles in Currents

Kjetil Vaage (blue hat), from the University of Bergen, Norway and a former student in the MIT-WHOI Joint Program, helps prepare a moored profiler for deployment north of Fram Strait…

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Noble Undertaking

Noble Undertaking

MIT-WHOI Joint Program student Cara Manning collects a water sample for noble gas analysis aboard the R/V Tioga in December 2012. Cara and her advisor, Rachel Stanley, installed a portable noble…

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A Strong Stomach

A Strong Stomach

WHOI biologist Alfred Redfield (left) aboard WHOI’s first research ship Atlantis, was fond of telling this story about the second day of his first Atlantis cruise: “[T]here was a pretty…

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The River Styx?

The River Styx?

WHOI researchers Paul Henderson (left) and Matt Charette prepare to enter a cenote, or natural sinkhole, near Puerto Morelos, Mexico. The limestone bedrock in this region is very porous, with…

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Women’s History Month at WHOI

Women's History Month at WHOI

Mentors & Mentees MIT-WHOI Joint Program graduate student Jill McDermott learned about hydrothermal vent chemistry from one of the masters—she was one of Karen Von Damm’s last students. McDermott recalled…

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Women’s History Month at WHOI

Women's History Month at WHOI

Mentors & Mentees Former University of New Hampshire professor Karen Von Damm (shown here after an Alvin dive) graduated from the MIT-WHOI Joint Program in 1984, a time when few…

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Which Way is Up?

Which Way is Up?

Most oceanographic survey instruments look down at the seafloor. On a recent trip to the Southern Ocean, though, members of Hanu Singh’s lab equipped one of their SeaBED vehicles to…

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Eat My Dust

Eat My Dust

Vic Miller pulls an exhaust duct into place to vacuum up the resin dust left after he and fellow mechanic Joe Harvey sanded a large piece of syntactic foam. The…

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Studying Distant Rivers Locally

Studying Distant Rivers Locally

People living near rivers can become “citizen scientists” to aid research focusing on Earth’s river systems in a time of changing climate. Leaders of the Global Rivers Observatory Project—WHOI chemist…

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A Turn at the Winch

A Turn at the Winch

WHOI research specialist Daniel Torres, dressed for cold even in August, watches wire pay out from a winch to deploy a mooring in the ocean off Norway. Torres was aboard…

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After the Storm

After the Storm

Notice the cleanly plowed pier next to WHOI’s research vessel Atlantis after the February blizzard that crippled much of New England. “The Facilities & Services team at WHOI are often…

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Crystal Clear

Crystal Clear

MIT-WHOI Joint Program student Tom DeCarlo holds a vial containing aragonite, a crystal form of calcium carbonate, the mineral that reef-building corals use to build their skeletons. To make aragonite,…

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A Whale Rises

A Whale Rises

On a 2012 research cruise in Antarctica, WHOI postdoctoral scientist Peter Kimball helped use the robotic vehicle Jaguar to map the underside of the ice. But the trip was memorable…

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