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         Oceanography Research Submersibles:     more detail
  1. Research submersibles in oceanography, (Contribution of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, no. 2456) by Robert D Ballard, 1970
  2. Future Needs in Deep Submergence Science: Occupied and Unoccupied Vehicles in Basic Ocean Research by Committee on Future Needs in Deep Submergence Science, National Research Council, 2004-03-05
  3. Undersea Vehicles and National Needs by Committee on Undersea Vehicles and National Needs, National Research Council, 1996-11-19
  4. Underwater exploration: An entry from Thomson Gale's <i>Gale Encyclopedia of Science, 3rd ed.</i> by Gillian S. Holmes, 2004
  5. The unmanned submersible as an Arctic research tool by Gordon M Gray, 1972
  6. Woods Hole, Mass. Oceanographic Institution. Reference by Scott C Daubin, 1969
  7. Summary reports of vessels, aircraft flights, and submarine dives during 1972 (Technical memorandum / Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution) by W. M Dunkle, 1973
  8. Summary reports of vessels, aircrafts and submarines during 1967 (Technical memorandum WHOI) by W. M Dunkle, 1969
  9. Summary report of vessels, aircraft flights and submarine dives during 1973 (Technical memorandum WHOI) by W. M Dunkle, 1974
  10. NR-1 submersible cruise report for Offshore Operators Committee study of chemosynthetic marine ecosystems in the Gulf of Mexico by James M. Brooks, Mahlon C. Kennicutt II, and Robert R. Bidigare by J. M Brooks, 1987

61. Navy League Of The United States - Citizens In Support Of The Sea Services
Two Russian Mirclass submersibles were used; each carried a pilot and two and usually the control, of oceanographic research and expeditions.
http://www.navyleague.org/sea_power/jan_00_07.php
Sea Power Current Issue of Sea Power Almanac of Seapower Sea Power Magazine Archive Advertising How to Subscribe Contact Sea Power About Sea Power January 2000 The Political Ocean By DON WALSH DON WALSH served 25 years in the Navy, during which time he was involved in many aspects of Navy oceanographic activity. In 1975, he founded and chaired the Institute for Marine and Coastal Studies at the University of Southern California. He left that post in 1983 to devote full time to International Maritime Inc., which he founded in 1975 and still heads. With the executive and legislative branches of government being controlled by different political parties there are considerable differences of opinion on how to run the nation's business. The Y2K presidential election seems likely to sharpen the differences and, quite possibly, cause additional problems, particularly on budgetary matters. What does this mean for the national ocean program? Essentially, very little. In the early days of the Republican-majority Congress the "reformers" wanted to use everything from a scalpel to a meat axe to reorganize government. If implemented, their proposals could have had a major negative impact on ocean science and technology. Today, almost all of the earlier theatrics and rhetoric has been replaced by a massive inertia. This means that the funding pattern of the past few years probably will be followedi.e., some ocean programs will grow slightly, most will keep pace with the rate of inflation, and a few will suffer some reductions.

62. Canadians At Work In The World
Dale has participated on 14 oceanographic cruises on numerous vessels including He has experience with the research submersibles DELTA, ALVIN, SEACLIFF,
http://www.enoreo.on.ca/citw/antarctica/ant-biography.htm
Dr. Dale Stokes is a Canadian Oceanographer and a graduate from a doctoral program at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California.
Educational History
Dale attended St. Bernard's Elementary School, St. Ignatius (jr. high) and then Hillcrest High School, all in Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada. He received his B.Sc. (honors) in Biology and Geology from Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario. This was followed by a Ph.D. in Oceanography from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, California. Dale then went on to 2 years of post-doctoral work at Stanford University's, Hopkins Marine Station in Pacific Grove, California.
He is currently employed as a Project Scientist (Level II) in the Marine Physical Laboratory at Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
Some previous research experiences
Dale has participated on 14 oceanographic cruises on numerous vessels including the Sproul, New Horizon, FLIP, DeStiger, Laney Chouest, Wm MacGaw, Thomas Thompson, Atlantis, Atlantis II, Vector. He has experience with the research submersibles DELTA, ALVIN, SEACLIFF, and TURTLE, as well as the rov's ATV and SCORPIO. He has worked on SCUBA research projects in Florida, Caribbean, California, Vancouver Island, Bay of Fundy and McMurdo Sound.

63. Ocean World, Stewart S NMEA Talk
Nowadays, at the forefront of oceanographic research, manned submersibles haveprobably just passed their peak of paradigm reign, like railroads many
http://oceanworld.tamu.edu/NMEA_Talk/NMEA_Talk_2004.html

64. EXPLORATION OF THE DEEP BLUE SEA Unveiling The Ocean's Mysteries | IN FOCUS, 4.1
One component dedicated to exploration would utilize ships, submersibles, Seafloor Observatory Network for Oceanographic research, Ocean Studies Board,
http://infocusmagazine.org/4.1/env_ocean.html
Winter/Spring 2004 Vol. 4 No. 1
Exploration of the Deep Blue Sea
Unveiling the Ocean's Mysteries
T he oceans cover nearly three-quarters of the Earth's surface, regulate our weather and climate, and sustain a large portion of the planet's biodiversity, yet we know very little about them. In fact, most of this underwater realm remains unexplored. Three recent reports from the National Research Council propose a significantly expanded international infrastructure for ocean exploration and research to close this knowledge gap and unlock the many secrets of the sea. Already a world leader in ocean research, the United States should lead a new exploration endeavor by example. "Given the limited resources in many other countries, it would be prudent to begin with a U.S. exploration program that would include foreign representatives and serve as a model for other countries," said John Orcutt, the committee chair for one of the reports and deputy director, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego. "Once programs are established elsewhere, groups of nations could then collaborate on research and pool their resources under international agreements." Using new and existing facilities, technologies, and vehicles, proposed efforts to understand the oceans would follow two different approaches. One component dedicated to exploration would utilize ships, submersibles, and satellites in new ways to uncover the ocean's biodiversity, such as the ecosystems associated with deep-sea hydrothermal vents, coral reefs, and volcanic, underwater mountains.

65. People
he has made 75 deepsea dives in research submersibles and has spent another 54 research/Penn State samples the diversity and drama of Penn State s
http://www.rps.psu.edu/deep/people.html

66. Dr. Henrietta Edmonds' Outreach Lecture Information
In 1977, scientists diving in the submersible Alvin on the Galapagos Ridge made a She did postdoctoral research at the Graduate School of oceanography
http://www.esi.utexas.edu/outreach/ols/lectures/Edmonds/
@import url(../../../../utTest.css);
D. S. V. Alvin being lifted onto the R/V Atlantis II Photo by Dr. H. N. Edmonds Co-sponsored by:
  • The University of Texas at Austin College of Natural Sciences The Mayfield Fund of the Geology Foundation The Texas Memorial Museum of The University of Texas at Austin
VOLUME #7 - September 15, 2000 Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea by Dr. Henrietta Edmonds
SUMMARY OF LECTURE
BIOSKETCH OF DR. HENRIETTA EDMONDS Dr. Henrietta Edmonds
UT Directory
UT Offices A-Z UT Site Map ... UT Home Last modified: January 19, 2005
Contact ESI Webmaster

67. KZN Wildlife - Diving Stories
However, the biological and oceanographic research component of the expeditionwill continue research activities include the use of ships, submersibles,
http://www.kznwildlife.com/diving_stories.htm
HOME
DIVING
STORIES
Safety Stories Resources Report ... Back to intro......
COELACANTH RESEARCH PROGRAMME
2nd JAGO SODWANA CRUISE April 2003
Background Following the exciting discovery of a coelacanth colony in November 2000 in the Jesser Canyon off Sodwana Bay, Greater St Lucia Wetland Park, a state funded research expedition was mounted in early 2002 to establish the nature of this colony. The first leg of the coelacanth research programme off the coast of Maputaland in northern KwaZulu-Natal involved deep sea dives in the St Lucia Marine Reserve in the submersible Jago in April 2002. This ongoing programme is being co-ordinated by the South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity (SAIAB) for partner organisations in a number of research institutions in South Africa, South African Development Community (SADC) and internationally beyond Africa. Conservation of coelacanths is the focus of the study, with an emphasis on the processes that sustain biodiversity, promote conservation and explain evolutionary biology. Research aspects of the coelacanth programme draw together marine geoscience and oceanography to blend with marine biological aspects, and with genetics and genome resource studies to create an integrated biophysical education programme aimed at exciting scholars and students and encouraging them to choose science as a career. Considerable attention is being paid to capacity building to promote science and entry into science in Southern and Eastern Africa.

68. P16
RECENT IMPROVEMENTS TO DEEPSEA research THROUGH. USE OF submersibles, ACOUSTIC THE APPLICATION OF HIGH DATA RATE TRANSMISSION ON OCEANOGRAPHIC research
http://www.olympus.net/IAPSO/GeneralAssembly99/P16/P16full.htm
P16 Friday 30 July RECENT IMPROVEMENTS TO DEEP-SEA RESEARCH THROUGH USE OF SUBMERSIBLES, ACOUSTIC TOMOGRAPHY AND IN- SITU LONG TERM OBSERVATIONS (IAPSO) Location: Arts Building, 125 LR1 Friday 30 July AM Presiding Chairs: A. Flosadottir (Univ. of Washington, Seattle, USA), R. Iwase (Deep-Sea Res., JAMSTEC, Yokosuka, Japan) LONG-TERM MONITORING OF OCEANIC SEISMICITY USING UNDERWATER ACOUSTIC TECHNIQUES Christopher G. FOX, Robert P. Dziak (both at NOAA, Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory, 2115 S.E. OSU Drive, Newport, OR 97365 USA email: fox@pmel.noaa.gov) FOUR-YEARS' CHANGE OF THE TAG HYDROTHERMAL MOUND OBSERVED BY SUBMERSIBLESHINKAI 6500 DEEP-SEA SUBMERSIBLE MAGNETICS ACROSS A MID-OCEAN RIDGE LONG TERM DEEP SEAFLOOR MONITORING AT COLD SEEPAGE SITE OFF HATSUSHIMA ISAND IN SAGAMI BAY Ryoichi IWASE, Hiroyasu Momma, Kyohiko Mitsuzawa and Katsuyoshi Kawaguchi (Deep Sea Research Department, Japan Marine Science and Technology Center, 2-15 Natsushima-cho, Yokosuka, 237-0061, Japan, email: iwaser@jamstec.go.jp) COMPREHENSIVE DEEP SEAFLOOR MONITORING SYSTEM OFF CAPE MUROTO, WESTERN JAPAN

69. CORE - Education Workshop Report
CORE Consortium for Oceanographic research and Education and resourcesthrough research vessels, platforms and buoys, submersibles, satellites, etc.
http://www.coreocean.org/Dev2Go.web?id=217754

70. Science -- Sign In
symbol of Japan s bid to become a major force in global oceanographic research . JAMSTEC and STA officials also realized that, while the submersibles
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/277/5323/170
You do not have access to this item: Full Text : Normile, OCEANOGRAPHY: Japan Plunges Into Ocean Science, Science You are on the site via Free Public Access. What content can I view with Free Public Access If you have a personal user name and password, please login below. SCIENCE Online Sign In Options For Viewing This Content User Name Password
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71. Science News: Oceanography, Oceanographers Research Climate Change, Geophysics.
COAS oceanographers conduct cuttingedge scientific research on climate change,earth systems, OceanographyCollege of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences
http://www.coas.oregonstate.edu/index.cfm?fuseaction=research.main

72. Workshop Home
July 69, 2005 School of oceanography, University of Washington, Seattle, Teaching About the Ocean System Using New research Techniques Data,
http://serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/ocean05/
On the Cutting Edge - Professional Development for Geoscience Faculty Teaching About the Ocean System Using New Research Techniques: Data, Models and Visualization University of Washington, Seattle, WA Cutting Edge Teaching the Ocean System
July 6-9, 2005
School of Oceanography, University of Washington, Seattle, WA
The goals of the workshop were to:
  • share information about the state of the art in modern oceanographic research integrate research and education through linking scientific methods and results with effective instructional practice, and develop a plan to expand the influence of oceanography in undergraduate Earth science education (at all types of institutions and across the curriculum)
Go to the workshop program to see the PowerPoint presentations, posters and notes from the workshop. To support your work both before and after the workshop, we have developed a digital collection of online resources about teaching the ocean system. We would like to ask for your help in building this collection. Please

73. National Institute Of Oceanography, India
is proposed for conducting multidisciplinary oceanographic research in the seas Other facilities include scope for submersible and ROV handling and
http://www.nio.org/jsp/facilities.jsp

74. Ocean Planet: Popular Science - Profiles Of Marine Research Facilities
Another was the 1977 discovery, from the manned submersible Alvin, of the remarkablecreatures Giant Among Giants Scripps Institution of oceanography
http://seawifs.gsfc.nasa.gov/OCEAN_PLANET/HTML/ps_institutions.html
Profiles of Marine Research Facilities
Science On A Barge - The Smithsonian Marine Station
by Arthur Fisher Location, location, location. It's critical for success in real estate and also comes in handy for doing science. Perhaps no place proves this better than the Smithsonian Institution's Marine Station (SMS) in central Florida. Crammed onto a converted military landing barge on the Indian River, a long brackish lagoon that runs along the Atlantic coast, the facility is ideally situated for its mission of studying marine diversity. "We are in a biogeographical transition zone," explains Mary E. Rice, SMS's intense, energetic director. "We have access to both temperate and tropical life, and to the offshore Florida current," with its abundance of plankton. These attributes lure dozens of scientists from all over the world to SMS to study the flora and fauna of mangroves and mud flats in the lagoon, as well as the sandy beaches and reefs of the Atlantic proper. Aiding scientists in their observations are two Johnson-Sea-Link subs, deep-diving submersibles that are owned and operated by the neighboring Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution. [See "He Seeks the Giant Squid."] Many of the organisms the institute studies are low-profile. Rice, for example, specializes in a group of intellectually challenging but esthetically challenged marine worms called sipunculans. But they shouldn't be overlooked. "Any valid discussion of large- scale environmental issues," Rice says, "must begin with basic scientific facts. Before we can ask how myriad species - including our own - interact, we must first know that they exist, and where, and in what abundance."

75. Hawai'i Drawing Waves Of Ocean Researchers - The Honolulu Advertiser - Hawaii's
place to do research, said David Karl, a professor of oceanography at the A University of Hawai i deepdiving submersible encounters a Japanese
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2004/Aug/17/ln/ln03a.html
CUSTOMER SERVICE Subscribe now How to advertise Contact us News Classifieds Paid Archives
Hawai'i's Newspaper Online Saturday, September 24, 2005
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FEATURED NEWS Nation/World news Movie showtimes TGIF Weekend Calendar Special projects ... Photo gallery CUSTOMER SERVICE Help page Contact us Subscriber services Reader services ... Today's front page RESOURCES Traffic hotspots Phone directory Hawaiian dictionary E-mail news alerts ... Printable version E-mail this story Posted on: Tuesday, August 17, 2004 Hawai'i drawing waves of ocean researchers Researchers are trying to figure out how to bring the Hawaiian monk seal's declining population back from the brink of extinction. NOAA Fisheries photos Photo gallery By Jan TenBruggencate Advertiser Science Writer An endangered Hawaiian monk seal lazes on a sunny beach. A World War II-era Japanese mini-sub lies on the ocean floor off Pearl Harbor. A strange bacterium uses a light-absorbing protein as its own solar panel, directly producing energy. Hawai'i's natural frontiers How Hawai'i has become a leader in scientific research.

76. Link Foundation Fellowships Newsletter
We are presently unable to navigate deep oceanographic submersibles with the My research with the Link Foundation focuses on developing techniques to
http://www.binghamton.edu/home/link/newsltr/2004/oceaneng.html
October 2004 Link Foundation Home Page Newsletter Home Page Inside this Issue
FEATURES
Welcome to our 2nd Edition, Lee Lynd
"Hooked on Earth Systems," Christopher Yang, Former Link Fellowship Recipient

"From the Chair of the Board," David M. Gouldin

Donor Listing
...
News Updates

MEET THIS YEARS' FELLOWSHIP RECIPIENTS
Energy (2004-2006)
Simulation and Training (2004-2005)

Ocean Engineering (2004-2005)
James Kinsey Department of Mechanical Engineering. The Johns Hopkins University Advisor: Louis L. Whitcomb, Dept of Mech. Eng. Contact: jkinsey@jhu.edu Title: Improved Navigation Techniques for Deep Oceanographic Submersibles Stephen Licht Department of Ocean Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Title: Investigation of the Maneuvering and Hovering Capabilities of a Flapping Foil Propelled Autonomous Underwater Vehicle The oceanographic community uses unmanned underwater vehicles, both remotely operated and autonomous, to reduce the cost and the risk of basic ocean research. In particular, autonomous robots are now being use as platforms for extended operations that would be prohibitively expensive with manned or piloted vehicles. Existing AUVs are optimized primarily for high cruising efficiency, leaving them uncontrollable at low speeds and unable to rapidly generate or respond to maneuvering forces. They are unsuited for use in confined spaces and in unsteady flow and, as a result, fundamentally interesting volumes of the ocean remain inaccessible to this cutting-edge, cost-effective technology.

77. Institutions Work Together To Advance Oceanographic And Earth Science By Integra
Groups Create Cyberinfrastructure for Marine research and Education A newparadigm in oceanography has emerged through advances in information
http://www.sdsc.edu/Press/2005/01/012405_ocean_earth.html
Projects Databases/Data Collections User Services Academic Associates ... Employment
SDSC Press Release
Institutions Work Together To Advance Oceanographic and Earth Science by Integrating New Technology
Groups Create Cyberinfrastructure for Marine Research and Education Media contacts: Greg Lund,
SDSC Communications,
greg@sdsc.edu
Ashley Wood,
SDSC Communications,
awood@sdsc.edu
La Jolla, California This first-time collaboration brings together SDSC and Scripps Institution of Oceanography with Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and the Center for International Earth Science Information Network. By working together, this program will allow for the advancement of oceanographic and earth sciences by integrating new data technologies. "A new paradigm in oceanography has emerged through advances in information technology and integrating data from oceanographic ships at sea through continuous connections to the Internet, including video for classroom teaching from teachers at sea," said John Orcutt, deputy director for research at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego. "Sharing data among institutions, researchers, teachers and the general public will ignite a revolutionary change in how we go to sea to study Earth."

78. Commissioners' Biographies
While at Woods Hole, he pioneered the use of manned submersibles, His primaryinterests are science education and oceanographic research of coastal
http://www.oceancommission.gov/commission/commissionbios.html

Meet the Commissioners
The 16 members of the Commission on Ocean Policy have diverse experiences in areas ranging from ocean exploration, resource development, and marine transportation to marine science, policy and law. Commission members have expertise in Federal, State, and local government administration, including members with experience in marine issues from naval, resource management, academic research, and private sector perspectives.
Admiral James D. Watkins, USN (Ret.), Chairman

Robert Ballard, Ph.D.

Mr. Ted A. Beattie

Mrs. Lillian Borrone
...
Dr. Thomas R. Kitsos, Executive Director

Admiral James D. Watkins, USN (Ret.) (Maryland)
Commission on Ocean Policy Chairman

top

Robert Ballard, Ph.D. (Connecticut) top Mr. Ted A. Beattie (Illinois) top Mrs. Lillian Borrone (New Jersey) top Dr. James M. Coleman (Louisiana) Dr. James Coleman is the Boyd Professor for the Coastal Studies Institute of Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College. Dr. Coleman is a former chairman of the Marine Board and presently a member of the Ocean Studies Board of the National Academy of Sciences. He is a member of the National Academy of Engineering and Russian Academy of Natural Sciences. His research interests include coastal and marine processes and coastal management. He has received many awards in his nearly 40-year scientific career, including the Kapitsa Medal of Honor for his contributions to the field of petroleum sciences. top Ms. Ann D'Amato (California)

79. Home Page For John E. Warme
North Africa; Coastal research in California, Mexico, Caribbean; Oceanographiccruises, research submersibles, SCUBA in Caribbean, eastern Pacific
http://www.mines.edu/academic/geology/faculty/jwarme/
John E. Warme Return to Faculty Directory Contact Information Education
  • Professor. BA Augustana College
  • PhD University of California/Los Angeles
  • Fulbright Scholar, University of Edinburgh
Education
Teaching Experience

Research Experience

General Research Interests
...
Selected Papers
Education
  • B.A, Augustana College, Rock Island, Illinois, 1959
  • Ph.D., Univ. of California, Los Angeles, 1966
  • Postdoctorate, Fulbright Scholar; Universtiy of Edinburgh, Scotland; 1966-67
Teaching Experience
  • Colorado School of Mines, Professor of Geology and Geological Engineering
  • Rice University, Houston, Texas: Assistant, Associate, Full Professor or Geology;
  • W. Maurice Ewing Professor of Oceanography (1967-1979)
  • California Lutheran College, Thousand Oaks, California: Lecturer (1961), Instructor (1962)
  • Visiting Professor at UCLA, UC Davis; Demonstrator, University of Edinburg, Scotland
  • Numerous continuing education and short courses for universities, companies

80. NeMO Cruise 1998
Deepsea research submersibles. ALVIN Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute.Nautile IFREMER, French oceanographic institution. MIR Russia s Shirshov Institute
http://newport.pmel.noaa.gov/nemo_cruise98/relatedwebs.html
HOME WHAT'S NEW:
Deepsea Image Galleries
on Multimedia page
(posted 9/15/98)
Eruption Confirmed!

New lava (rumbleometer stuck in flow) SE rift zone
(posted 9/1/98) BACKGROUND: NeMO Project Description Mission 1998 Plans Technology (ROV, ships, etc.) Future Plans Axial 1998 "Eruption" Page Other 1998 Axial cruise reports EXPEDITION: ... Calendar
Today's Science News
Participant Perspective
Teacher Logbook EDUCATION:

Curriculum
Teacher Observations Questions/Answers from sea MULTIMEDIA: (video clips, animations, sounds) RELATED LINKS
RESOURCES
The WWW connects you to many sources of information related to hydrothermal vents, oceanography, expeditions and accompanying educational material. Searching the WWW for all these resources can be a complex voyage in itself. Provided here are links to some highly informative sites which in turn will link you to other avenues of exploration. Enjoy your journey! NeMO Project Partners NOAA Vents Program: http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/vents/

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