Skip to content

Multimedia Items


An Icy Burden

An Icy Burden

Clearing ice from the decks of the U.S. Coast Guard icebreaker Healy was a regular task for ship’s crew during a 2011 cruise in the Chukchi, Beaufort, and Bering Seas. Wintertime Arctic conditions…

Read More

Outreach Reaches Outer Space

Outreach Reaches Outer Space

Four students from Montachusett Regional Vocational Technical School in Fitchburg, Mass., visited the lab of WHOI microbiologist Tracy Mincer (far right) in February to set up an experiment they designed…

Read More

Fire and Ice

Fire and Ice

The U.S. Coast Guard icebreaker Healy operates in the North Pacific and Arctic Oceans from late spring until early winter, helping scientists carry out research in the far north. It…

Read More

Look Ma, No Lines

Look Ma, No Lines

WHOI biologist Annette Frese Govindarajan (center, blue hard hat) and data manager Sarah Burnet (left), assisted with the launch of the autonomous underwater vehicle Sentry in the Gulf of Mexico in…

Read More

Go to Sea, Young Man

Go to Sea, Young Man

In 1965, WHOI microbiologist John Waterbury was a young researcher studying microorganisms in the upper ocean that convert inorganic nitrogen into a form that phytoplankton can use to drive the…

Read More

Smooth Sailing Through Pancake Ice

Smooth Sailing Through Pancake Ice

The icebreaker USCGC Healy opens a path through first-year pancake ice in the Amundsen Gulf during a 2011 mooring cruise in the Arctic Ocean. Though pancake ice can cover large…

Read More

We’re Outta There!

We're Outta There!

Associate Scientist Mak Saito saw plenty of Adélie penguins during his International Polar Year expedition to Antarctica in 2009. His study focused on the collection of sea-ice and water column algae, but another project soon emerged.…

Read More

A Swell Time on Healy

A Swell Time on Healy

Icy Arctic swells rocked the U.S. Coast Guard icebreaker Healy during a six-week science expedition in 2011. WHOI biologist Carin Ashjian and colleagues Sam Laney and Krista Longnecker visited the Arctic…

Read More

Testing, 1, 2, 3

Testing, 1, 2, 3

WHOI biologist Aran Mooney places a cuttlefish, a close relative of squid, into a tank to test how it responds to sound. Mooney previously showed that sounds provoke nerve responses…

Read More

Intro to Ocean Research

Intro to Ocean Research

Skidmore College senior and Ocean Research Experience (ORE) Fellow Jay Brett (center) dissects a fish with the help of WHOI marine biologist Vicke Starzcak (left) and MIT/WHOI graduate student Maya…

Read More

Can Dolphins Get the Bends?

Can Dolphins Get the Bends?

Researchers think dolphins may be particularly good at avoiding something humans are susceptible to: the bends. Evidence suggests dolphins get bubbles in their veins when they swim up from the…

Read More

Mountains Upon Mountains

Mountains Upon Mountains

What look like colorful floating landscapes might better be called “oilscapes.” They were created by WHOI scientists using comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography, which identifies thousands of individual chemical compounds that…

Read More