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More than Skin Deep

More than Skin Deep

WHOI’s Aran Mooney (left) and Julie Arruda (middle) and Iliana Ruiz-Cooley (right) from NOAA’s Protected Resource Division in San Diego prepare a Humboldt squid (Dosidicus gigas) for a a CT scan at…

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Patience Rewarded

Patience Rewarded

On November 7, 2011, WHOI biologist Peter Wiebe was on board the National Science Foundation research vessel Laurence M. Gould as the ship approached the dock at the Palmer Station…

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The Sea’s Bounty

The Sea's Bounty

A collection of copepods fills a specimen dish to be identified and counted. Scientists on board the research vessel Ka’imikai-o-Kanaloa collected the sample off the northeast coast of Japan in…

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Launching the Video Plankton Recorder

The Video Plankton Recorder (VPR) is an underwater video microscope system that that takes images of plankton and particulate matter as small as 50 microns and up to a few…

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Out of Antarctica

Out of Antarctica

Livingston Island in the South Shetlands rises sharply in front of the L.M. Gould’s bow in December 2011 after the ship departs Palmer Station, the U.S. research station on the…

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Survival Suits You

Survival Suits You

The science crew on board any UNOLS (University-National Oceanographic Laboratory System) research vessel spends part of the first day of every cruise in safety briefings and drills. One activity involves…

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Grumpy Grouper

Grumpy Grouper

Despite its expression of perpetual disgust, this jewel grouper (Cephalopholis miniata), also known as coral cod or vermillion seabass, enjoys balmy waters and rich feeding grounds in the clear water…

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CSI Woods Hole

CSI Woods Hole

At WHOI, CSI stands for Computerized Scanning and Imaging Lab. The lab, which is a part of the Institution’s Marine Mammal Center, has a CT scanner dedicated to marine research…

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Thar It Blows

Thar It Blows

A bowhead whale surfaces and blows in the Bering Sea. Because polar regions are seasonally ice-covered, it is impossible for scientists to visually track whales year-round. Instead, researchers install moorings…

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New Horizons

New Horizons

After 36 years and 500 missions for WHOI, the research vessel R/V Oceanus will be changing home ports and oceans. The 177-foot vessel arrived at WHOI in November 1975. Since…

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A Titanic Puzzle

A Titanic Puzzle

WHOI scientist Hanu Singh and former graduate student Sacha Wichers examine a photo mosaic of the wreck of RMS Titanic. The 866 individual photos that make up the mosaic were…

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Tiny Eyes

Tiny Eyes

Look closely and you will see black and white eyes in these fish eggs. Mussels, snails, sponges, and other marine life commonly use cables and instruments left in the sea…

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Sibling Ships

Sibling Ships

The research vessel Oceanus was greeted by its little sibling, Asterias, near Woods Hole. After its arrival in Woods Hole in November 1975, Oceanus proved to be a workhorse, with…

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Dressed for the Deep

Dressed for the Deep

Each summer, graduate students in the MIT-WHOI Joint Program are welcomed to Woods Hole and to oceanography with the ten-day Jake Peirson Summer Cruise aboard the Sea Education Association ship SSV Corwith Cramer. Students learn how to do…

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Knockout

Knockout

Somewhere during the 47-year life of the deep-submergence vehicle Alvin, someone found that padded boxing gloves did a perfect job of protecting the submerisble’s manipulator arms while it sat on…

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Searching for the Past

Searching for the Past

A REMUS 100 autonomous underwater vehicle dove through the clear, blue waters of the Mediterranean in September 2011 on a mission to find and survey Bronze Age shipwrecks off the…

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A “Beach” in the Mediterranean

A "Beach" in the Mediterranean

During a 2011 Dive & Discover cruise in the Mediterranean, scientists from WHOI and other institutions explored three super-salty “lakes” called DHABs at the bottom of the sea. They used…

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In the ‘Washing Machine’

In the 'Washing Machine'

With a storm approaching, a team worked “in the washing machine” of a raging surf zone at the Field Research Facility in Duck, N.C. in 2011 to recover instruments measuring…

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Psychotherapy for Plankton

Psychotherapy for Plankton

WHOI graphic artist Amy Caracappa-Qubeck drew this humorous cartoon after Erin Bertrand described her research on environmental “stressors” that govern the productivity of microscopic marine plants, or phytoplankton, at the…

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REMUS Reef Reconnaissance

REMUS Reef Reconnaissance

In order to design marine preserves that best protect fish, conservationists need to know more about where and how fish move from their larval to adult stages. In 2006, WHOI…

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Something FISH-y

Something FISH-y

FISH (fluorescence in situ hybridization) is a powerful technique in which a fluorescent tag is attached to an RNA fragment that in turn binds to specific kinds of cells. This…

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