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Ice Water

Ice Water

WHOI glaciologist Sarah Das who calls herself a “frozen oceanographer” snapped this aerial view of a “supraglacial” lake in the summer of 2003. As the Greenland ice sheet melts, more…

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Staying Afloat

Staying Afloat

Engineering assistant Kris Newhall (left) and senior engineering assistant John Kemp examine and repair floats inside a workshop on the Canadian icebreaker Louis S. St-Laurent during the summer 2005 leg…

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You Can’t Get This Map at AAA

You Can't Get This Map at AAA

The Autonomous Benthic Explorer (ABE) used sonar signals to compile this bathymetric map (the underwater equivalent of topography) of the Susu Knolls area off the coast of Papua New Guinea.…

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Checking It Twice

Checking It Twice

Senior engineering assistant Jeff Lord examines pieces of a new inductive-telemetry buoy that WHOI researchers deployed off of Barbados in April 2007. The buoy is the seventh in a series…

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The Newest Arctic Explorers

The Newest Arctic Explorers

Puma and Jaguar are autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) designed to overcome the technical challenges that have long precluded scientific exploration in the deep reaches of the Arctic Ocean. Puma has…

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Booby Prize

Booby Prize

A booby flies by and checks out the WHOI Hawaii Ocean Time-series Station (WHOTS III) shortly after researchers and technicians deployed it off of Hawaii in June 2006 from the…

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Making the Classroom Come Alive

Making the Classroom Come Alive

Graduate students and scientists gather for a photo postcard from Godafoss, Iceland in June 2006. Every year, MIT/WHOI students in the Geodynamics Program make a field expedition to connect what…

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Drops in the Bucket

Drops in the Bucket

A rack full of Apex floats sit in the main science lab of the research vessel Oceanus, awaiting launch into the North Atlantic as part of the CLIMODE research program. Floats are…

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Teamwork

Teamwork

Engineering assistant Michael McCarthy (left) and senior engineering assistant Neil McPhee work to assemble the surface buoy for a GumbyMoor, a new mooring design that allows the line to stretch…

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Worth Every (Sand) Dollar

Worth Every (Sand) Dollar

Ensign Greg Dietzen a student in the MIT/WHOI graduate program and a U.S. Navy officer was named this week as the 2007 recipient of the Rear Admiral Richard Pittenger Fellowship.…

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Testing…1, 2, 3

Testing...1, 2, 3

Research Associate Rick Krishfield, a veteran of more than two dozen Arctic expeditions, tests the electronics and programming of the “Arctic Winch” during the 2005 leg of the Beaufort Gyre…

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Degree of Honor

Degree of Honor

With the research vessel Knorr in the background, the first graduates of the MIT/WHOI Joint Program in Oceanography and Oceanographic Engineering received their diplomas in Woods Hole on June 17,…

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A Solid Foundation

A Solid Foundation

WHOI mechanical shop member Geoffrey Ekblaw welds part of the frame of the Nereus hybrid remotely operated vehicle.  The HROV is a single vehicle that will perform two very different…

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Springtime in the Arctic Circle

Springtime in the Arctic Circle

From April 1 to 13, 2007, WHOI chemists and geologists explored the Mackenzie River Delta in the Canadian Arctic in search of clues of historic and recent changes in the…

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Rice in a Snow Storm

Rice in a Snow Storm

Biology graduate student Kristen Whalen inspects a gorgonian (also known as a soft coral or sea fan) for a specialist nudibranch that feeds exclusively on this one species. The white,…

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Heavy Lifting

Heavy Lifting

Dock workers use a crane to lift the 48,500-pound rope storage winch onto the deck of the research vessel Knorr. The winch will hold a fiber rope that was custon…

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Getting to the Core of the Matter

Getting to the Core of the Matter

Geologist Jeff Donnelly (right foreground) demonstrates his techniques for extracting sediment cores from coastal marshes. Donnelly and colleagues have been examining the history of hurricane strikes along the U.S. East…

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Ice, Ice Baby

Ice, Ice Baby

WHOI senior engineering assistant John Kemp is lowered in a basket to recover a buoy from the ice during a summer 2004 expedition to study the upper layers of the…

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Chain Gang

Chain Gang

MIT/WHOI graduate student Annette Hynes captured this microscope photograph, or micrograph, of a colony of Trichodesmium at 1000x magnification. A form of primitive, nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria, Trichodesmium are often found in…

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Totally Tangled Tethers

Totally Tangled Tethers

MIT/WHOI Joint Program student Kelly Rakow attempts to untangle the tethers attached to her fellow divers during a “blue water” dive off the Pacific coast of Panama. The tether system…

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Yellow Submarine Volcano Watcher

Yellow Submarine Volcano Watcher

Will Ostrom, Keith von der Heydt, and Neil McPhee (from left to right) prepare to lower and test the base of the Real-time Offshore Seismic Station (RTOSS) buoy off the…

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What’s Left When the Glacier Retreats?

What's Left When the Glacier Retreats?

Glaciated ridges tower over Route 1 and the Vatnsskarð mountain pass (west of Varmalið) in Iceland. WHOI students and scientists visited the region in June 2006 as the capstone on…

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