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Family digs deep in Japan

Family digs deep in Japan

Jon Woodruff, a recent graduate of the MIT/WHOI Joint Program, is interested in ancient bits of grit and shell that he pulls from lagoons and marshes using hollow metal tubes,…

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Danube Delta

Danube Delta

Did a catastrophic flood of biblical proportions drown the shores of the Black Sea 9,500 years ago, wiping out early Neolithic settlements around its perimeter? Liviu Giosan, a geologist in…

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Bering Sea spring

Bering Sea spring

WHOI biologist Carin Ashjian wheels the Video Plankton Recorder (VPR) to the stern of the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter and icebreaker Healy in March 2008, preparing to deploy it in…

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Marching toward extinction?

Marching toward extinction?

Emperor penguins (popularized by the 2005 movie “March of the Penguins”) depend on sea ice for their daily lives — it’s where they breed, feed, and molt. These young emperor…

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Seeing double

Seeing double

From a small boat, while scouting for jellyfish, R/V Oceanus Chief Mate Ethan Galac took in views of the 177-foot ship. He and other crew members were helping scientists Larry Madin and Erich Horgan find…

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Flower of the deep

Flower of the deep

The deep ocean is home to hundreds of species with soft, jelly-like tissues. Many of these gelatinous animals are transparent, and many are beautiful. Siphonophores, such as the one pictured,…

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Laboratory and studio

Laboratory and studio

MIT/WHOI Joint Program student Stephanie Waterman was interviewed about her research for an audio slide show produced by Ari Daniel Shapiro, a recent graduate from the Joint Program. Stephanie is…

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Antarctic krill

Antarctic krill

WHOI/MIT Joint Program graduate student Andrew McDonnell captured this image of an Antarctic krill during the first of two month-long cruises off of the West Antarctic Peninsula during the Austral…

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Back on board

Back on board

Engineers and crew aboard R/V Oceanus work to recover a deep-ocean mooring in the northwest tropical Atlantic in summer 2008. The mooring recovery/deployment cruise, led by physical oceanographer Al Plueddemann,…

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Fragile predator

Fragile predator

The jellyfish Crossota alba. Delicate jellyfish such as this thrive in the deep sea, where no wind, waves, or turbulence threaten to tear them apart, and are successful predators in…

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Foam, it’s not just for cups

Foam, it's not just for cups

WHOI engineer Rod Catanach shows off foam used to keep several deep sea vehicles buoyant, including Alvin and Nereus. It’s a durable, light-weight material; engineers use syntactic foam, a matrix of billions of…

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Front row vessel

Front row vessel

Captain Ken Houtler and mate Ian Hanley stand on the bow of their vessel, the R/V Tioga, for a good view of the dockside press conference about WHOI’s role in…

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Snowy volcano

Snowy volcano

WHOI researcher and photographer Chris Linder gazes at 12,400-foot Mt. Erebus in Antarctica. This was a calm day at Cape Royds, during an expedition in 2007, “though as you can…

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Blue rays

Blue rays

Is it fireworks, a flower, or a 1970’s fiber-optics lamp? None of the above!—it’s a colonial ocean animal related to jellyfish, called Porpita porpita. The colony has radiating blue “tentacles”—really…

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Shells reveal the past

Shells reveal the past

Seafloor sediments are full of tiny, lovely shells of single-celled ocean organisms that lived, died, and sank to the ocean bottom, building up in layers over the ages. The fossil…

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Beautiful but destructive

Beautiful but destructive

A Flamingo Tongue snail crawls over soft corals in the Caribbean. In an “arms race” over evolutionary time, the corals developed toxins that deter predators, but the snail evolved a…

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Drilling in the deep

Drilling in the deep

WHOI post-doctoral researcher Neal Cantin (left) and MIT/WHOI Joint Program student Casey Saenger (right) collect tissue samples from a Diploastrea coral near a Red Sea cement plant. Cantin and other…

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UP AND AT ‘EM!

UP AND AT 'EM!

Members of the CATALYST ONE expedition team prepare for a sunrise launch in December 2008 of one of two 6,000-meter autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs), owned by the Waitt Institute for Discovery.…

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Working among icebergs

Working among icebergs

Are warmer ocean waters affecting Greenland’s ice sheet? To find answers, WHOI scientists this fall made use of a local, small vessel able to navigate the iceberg-filled waters of Sermilik…

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Bergs and boats

Bergs and boats

Icebergs drift into the port of Tasiilaq in Greenland, where WHOI scientists and colleagues from the University of Maine were based this summer while measuring ocean temperatures in nearby Sermilik…

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A new lab tool for animal research

A new lab tool for animal research

WHOI Biologist Michael Moore working with the International Fund for Animal Welfare Marine Mammal Rescue and Research Team prepare to examine a gray seal that was found dead in Wellfleet…

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An ancient presence

An ancient presence

Brain coral colonies can live for hundreds of years, and their skeletons preserve a record of environmental and climate changes throughout their lifetimes. WHOI scientists studying Earth’s past climate can…

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Lost and found

Lost and found

On board the research vessel Oden in 2007, WHOI engineer John Kemp used the ship’s crane-operated metal basket to retrieve a robotic vehicle called Puma. With a long metal pole, Kemp pushed aside…

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A whale fluke in Antarctica

A whale fluke in Antarctica

A humpback whale shows it’s tail, or fluke, off shore from the Unites States Antarctic Program’s Palmer Station, as the R/V L. M. Gould departs for its first oceanographic station…

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