Vessels and Equipment | Deep Sea News https://deepseanews.com All the news on the Earth's largest environment. Thu, 13 Jun 2024 14:55:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://csrtech.com The Inside Story of the Titan Submersible https://deepseanews.com/2024/06/the-inside-story-of-the-titan-submersible/ https://deepseanews.com/2024/06/the-inside-story-of-the-titan-submersible/#respond Thu, 13 Jun 2024 14:52:54 +0000 https://deepseanews.com/?p=60421

A great bit of writing and journalism at Wired on the avoidable Titan submersible incident.

“A trove of tens of thousands of internal OceanGate emails, documents, and photographs provided exclusively to WIRED by anonymous sources sheds new light on Titan’s development, from its initial design and manufacture through its first deep-sea operations. The documents, validated by interviews with two third-party suppliers and several former OceanGate employees with intimate knowledge of Titan, reveal never-before-reported details about the design and testing of the submersible. They show that Boeing and the University of Washington were both involved in the early stages of OceanGate’s carbon-fiber sub project, although their work did not make it into the final Titan design. The trove also reveals a company culture in which employees who questioned their bosses’ high-speed approach and decisions were dismissed as overly cautious or even fired. (The former employees who spoke to WIRED have asked not to be named for fear of being sued by the families of those who died aboard the vessel.) Most of all, the documents show how Rush, blinkered by his own ambition to be the Elon Musk of the deep seas, repeatedly overstated OceanGate’s progress and, on at least one occasion, outright lied about significant problems with Titan’s hull, which has not been previously reported.”

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Has Amelia Earhart’s Plane Been Found? https://deepseanews.com/2024/01/has-amelia-earharts-plane-been-found/ https://deepseanews.com/2024/01/has-amelia-earharts-plane-been-found/#respond Tue, 30 Jan 2024 22:17:00 +0000 https://deepseanews.com/?p=59407 It really isn’t my goal to turn DSN into a conspiracy blog, but then I wasn’t expecting someone to claim to have found Amelia Earhart’s…

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It really isn’t my goal to turn DSN into a conspiracy blog, but then I wasn’t expecting someone to claim to have found Amelia Earhart’s airplane.

In case you live under a rock…Amelia Earhart, the pioneering aviator, disappeared on July 2, 1937, during her attempt to circumnavigate the globe. She and her navigator, Fred Noonan, were flying from Lae, Papua New Guinea, to Howland Island when they vanished over the Pacific Ocean. Despite extensive search efforts, no trace of Earhart, Noonan, or their aircraft, a Lockheed Electra, was ever found. The disappearance sparked numerous theories, ranging from crash-and-sink scenarios to theories of Earhart being captured by the Japanese. Despite decades of speculation and search missions, the fate of Amelia Earhart remains one of aviation’s greatest mysteries.

On Saturday, Deep Sea Vision, an oceanic exploration firm headquartered in South Carolina, sonar imagery potentially depicting Earhart’s aircraft resting on the floor of the Pacific Ocean. Utilizing advanced unmanned underwater drones and a 16-member expeditionary team, the company surveyed over 5,200 square miles of seabed between September and December. Deep Sea Vision’s founder, Tony Romeo. is former U.S. Air Force intelligence officer and aviator and divested his real estate business in 2022 to embark on oceanic exploration, driven by a desire to contribute to the search for answers surrounding Earhart’s disappearance.

The identified plane-shaped entity lies approximately 100 miles off Howland Island, where Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, were scheduled to refuel before their untimely disappearance.

But not everyone is convinced, including Dr. Andrew Thaler of Southern Fried Science

I am also skeptical and I think the Lizard above sum’s it up quite nicely. Granted it is in plausible location. Sure it looks like plane. However sonar is notoriously difficult to deduce meaningful shape from at this level of resolution. This could just as easily be another misshapen bit of wreckage that in sonar looks like an airplane. Second, the big old World War II deposited a lot of airplanes and other vessels on the seafloor in South Pacific.

Also the swept wings of this “plane” do not really match that of Earhart’s Lockheed Model 10 Electra. Of course both could be broken and bent into exactly same angle…

Clearly, better sonar imagery and ROV/HOV dives are needed before this could even be considered plausibly Earhart’s plane.

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The Giant Turtle Boat of Your Dreams https://deepseanews.com/2023/12/the-giant-turtle-boat-of-your-dreams/ https://deepseanews.com/2023/12/the-giant-turtle-boat-of-your-dreams/#respond Fri, 15 Dec 2023 15:24:53 +0000 https://deepseanews.com/?p=59320 Hey there, DSN’ers! Have you ever dreamt of cruising the waves aboard a colossal, city-sized vessel shaped like an oversized turtle? Well, buckle up your…

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Hey there, DSN’ers! Have you ever dreamt of cruising the waves aboard a colossal, city-sized vessel shaped like an oversized turtle? Well, buckle up your life jackets because the future might just bring us, but probably not, the mind-boggling marvel called Pangeos! Pangeos after the supercontinent Pangea. Get it? Get it?

The brainchild of Pierpaolo Lazzarini, the Terayacht concept kicked off in 2009, aiming to birth a colossal giga-yacht, no terayacht, capable of housing an entire bustling city. Pangeos isn’t your average yacht; it’s a seafaring behemoth measuring a mind-boggling 550 meters in length and a whopping 610 meters at its widest point.  The largest cruise ship, Wonder of the Seas, measures 362 metres long and 64 metres wide.

Picture this: a floating marvel composed of around 30,000 unsinkable hull cells, housing enough space for a staggering 60,000 accommodations. It’s not just a city on water; it’s an entire ecosystem, complete with hotels, apartments, shopping centers, parks, and more!

But wait, there’s more! This isn’t your run-of-the-mill yacht propulsion. Pangeos sports 9 HTS engines, each with a stunning 16,800 horsepower. And here’s the kicker—the vessel’s flippers don’t just make it look like a turtle; they harness kinetic energy from waves, ensuring it cruises emission-free and perpetually around the world.

But hold onto your hats (or should I say lifejackets?) because this project is claimed to not be just a whimsical dream. It’s gearing up to become a reality, aiming for an estimated completion around 2033. However, it comes with a caveat—Pangeos needs a special home, a Terashipyard, spanning a jaw-dropping 650 meters in width and 600 meters in length. And guess where this floating marvel might dock? Yep, the stunning shores of Saudi Arabia!

Now, let’s talk numbers: this aquatic wonder comes with a price tag of $8 billion and an eight-year construction timeline. To bridge the gap between now and this fantastical future, Lazzarini Design Studio has conjured an innovative plan—selling “Unreal Estate” as NFTs, where virtual boarding tickets, hotel rooms, and even houses can be snagged for the metaverse version, all set to open its (virtual) doors by 2023.

So to see this to completion requires raising $8 billion raised through NFTs, an aggressive 8 year timeline, solving countless engineering feats, and building a brand-spankin new shipyard in the Saudia Arabian coastal desert. Totally feasible.

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My 25 Favorite Things For Ocean Field Work https://deepseanews.com/2019/02/my-25-favorite-things-for-ocean-field-work-2/ https://deepseanews.com/2019/02/my-25-favorite-things-for-ocean-field-work-2/#comments Tue, 05 Feb 2019 17:21:43 +0000 https://www.deepseanews.com/?p=58894 Next week my research group heads out to sea for our Gulf of Mexico research project on deep-sea wood falls. Make sure to pay attention…

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Next week my research group heads out to sea for our Gulf of Mexico research project on deep-sea wood falls. Make sure to pay attention to hashtag #woodfall for updates, images, and videos on both Twitter and Instagram. A Twitter thread started by Helen Scales, an amazing author of some of my favorite books who will be joining us on this expedition, asked what gear we like to take out to sea with us.

I am particular about my set of gear and equipment that I take when I am out at sea. Much time spent was spent on trial and error research and development of my sea kit. The items below reflect advice from my scientific mentors and advice about tools from my father and father-in-law, one an electrician the other an awesome car mechanic. This is by no means a comprehensive list but these are things I won’t leave home without.

1. Carhartts

Nothing beats a brand spanking new comfortable pair of Carhartts. No, wait that isn’t true. A new pair of Carhartts is rougher than sharkskin and when they get wet the chafing will start a fire between your thighs. Then why o’ why would a marine scientist wear them? Well first this is marine science not easy science, so suck it up. Second, when a pair of Carhartts are finally broken in, they are supple like leopard. Despite this, they will laugh in the face of sharp objects and protect your delicate marine scientist’s skin. The mud color, technically Carhartt brown, of the fabric means you can wear them for days in a row sorting benthic samples and nobody will know. Except for the smell. Protip: Don’t chintz and get the single layer ones, unless you are working in the tropics. You really want the double fronts.

Carhartt Men’s Double Front Work Dungaree Pant B01

2. Stocking Hat

Everyone calls this thing something different. My Australian colleagues giggle at me when I call it a ‘stocking’ hat. Take a second and think about it. No matter, spend some time doing deck ops at night, a few hours in cold and dark ROV control room, or processing samples in a cold van and you will definitely want this. I prefer a Carhartt stocking hat in charcoal grey because I look sooooo fine in it. Protip: When you do field work always look good.

Carhartt Men’s Knit Hat With Visor, Army Green, One Size

3. Hard Hat

You got to protect that noggin of yours because no matter how good you look in that stocking hat you are getting paid for your brains not your looks. Well hopefully. Everyone has their own hard hat preference. Some people use the ones lying around the ship. The same hard hats worn by 50 dozen other scientists this month alone. I prefer my own and one shaped like a cowboy hat. Look at me! I’m a Southern Boy at sea! Protip: Don’t hesitate to decorate the your hard hat how ever you see fit.

Vulcan Cowboy Hard Hat 6 Point Ratchet Suspension – White #VCB200

4. Pocket Knife

A decade ago when I went off to Antarctica, my wife sent me with a brand new CRKT pocket knife. I still have the knife and it is still reliable and sharp. Everyone again has personal preferences on what a pocket knife should include but let me tell you what I look for. You must be able to open it with a single hand. Good size thumb studs and fluid movement then are a must. I like a combo straight and serrated blade for a variety of tasks. And because I don’t want to slice my fingers off a locking blade is a must as well. The knife must also have a lanyard hole. You would be surprised how many knives do not. Also it needs to not be too big. You are not trying to be Rambo here. Protip: Grab yourself a sharpener. Nothing is more ridiculous than a dull knife. The Lansky PS-MED01 BladeMedic is amazing.

Crkt Knives 6813 Ryan Seven Combo Edge Knife

5. Lineman’s Pliers (or 9’s)

You want pull on something? Cut something? Grab something? Wrench something? And generally have a tool will accomplish every task you may face? You bet your bippy you do. That’s what lineman’s pliers are for and you must own a pair. Protip: Get a good set and be willing to spend a little money. My favorite quote from an Amazon review about 9’s is this “My grandfather used to say that if God had made 9″ Kleins first, it would’ve only taken him four days to finish the world.” Well you’re not God but you’ll be a little closer with these.
Klein Tools Tools D213-9NE 9-Inch High Leverage Side Cutting Plier

6. Snippers and Zip Ties

If you are good marine scientist you will go through your weight in cable ties. Make sure you get an assortment. You will also need something to snip all of those with. I have Hakko’s that are great quality and cheap. Protip: Purchase a divided utility box to keep your cable ties sorted by color and size.
Hakko CHP-170 Micro Clean Cutter, 16 Gauge Maximum Cutting Capacity

TEKTON 6235 Assorted Cable Ties, 200-Piece

7. These Velcro Straps

For binding up extension cords, rope, cable ties and just about everything else. Protip: Get them in multiple colors so you and your gear can be pretty.

Velcro Color Coded Multi-Pack Cable Ties in 6″, 9″ and 13.5″ Lengths

8. Multi-Bit Screwdriver

Don’t be that person with a mutlitool or the tip of your knife trying to screw something. My father-in-law gifted me a Klein multi-bit screwdriver years ago. I LOVE THIS THING. Everything right where it needs to be and all the head choices you really need—big and small, Phillips and flat heads. Protip: Make sure also to grab the little one too for all those tiny places.

Klein Tools 32557 Heavy-Duty Multi-Bit Screwdriver/Nut Driver

Klein 32561 Std. Stubby Screwdriver/Nut Driver with Cushion Grip. 6 in 1 Tool.

9. Duck Tape

Yeah I know it’s actually duct tape but I didn’t realize that until I was 9, or 29, years old. Go ahead and stock up on this because this miracle of the 20th century will probably save your ass more than once. Protip: Don’t get fancy with colors either because that will cost your more but do not buy an off brand, go straight for the 3M.

3M Utility Duct Tape 2929 Silver, 1-22/25 in x 50 yd 5.8 mils (Pack of 1)

10. Gridded Petri Dishes

Need to count a bunch of tiny things under the microscope? Or just need to start sorting fauna out of sediment samples. Then gridded petri dishes are your friend. The biodiversity of the deep sea is both a blessing and a curse. The lines actually help alleviate the latter.

Petri Dish, Square Grids – Package of 10

11. Stainless Steel Tally Counter

If you have never counted so many things that you needed a hand counter you are probably missing out. Not really. However there is something very soothing about clicking away the time with your thumb. Protip: Get the stainless steel one for the obvious reasons—like bragging to other scientists about your stainless steel tally counter

Buy Jump Ropes H-102 Stainless Steel Tally Counter

12. Tupperware

I cannot even begin to enumerate the reasons why you will need Tupperware in the field. Are you going to need to hold stuff? Are you going to need to keep stuff from moving about? Are you going need to construct something with just duct tape, zip ties, and Tupperware? Yes, Yes, and Yes. Protip: Buy an assortment pack.

Rubbermaid 50-Piece Easy Find Lid Food Storage Set

13. Cafeteria Tray

When working in the lab or at sea it is important to contain your mess and items. Cafeteria tray to the rescue! I’ve used these for dissection trays and for transferring items back and forth between the cold room and the lab. The fiberglass trays, as opposed to the plastic, are more durable. The one I use is stain, odor, and scratch-resistance perfect for marine invertebrates. Protip: Get one in black as it will make a nice background for shooting photographs of animals, rocks, and other samples.

Cambro 1520-110 Fiberglass Camtray Rectangular Cafeteria Tray, Black

14. Restaurant Bus Tub

Basically the same philosophy as the cafeteria tray but with sides! Keep your stuff organized in the lab and provides a nice containment area for all that wet sorting. Protip: Buy two.

Rubbermaid Commercial FG335100BRN Undivided Bus/Utility Box, 7-1/8-gallon, Brown

15. Shelf Liner

Shelf liner is cheap and keeps your laptop, coffee cup, microscope, and everything else from moving around. May just prevent that laptop from sliding right off the table onto the lab floor when the boat is rocking.

Con-Tact Grip Premium Non-Adhesive Shelf Liner, 12-Inch by 4-Feet, Black

16. Shop Paper Towels

Can some explain to me what is up with the little boxes of Chemwipes? They are expensive and do not absorb anything—sort of like John Wayne toilet paper. Chemwipes are the scooters of paper towels. Sure there cute and little but if you are driving more than a couple of miles worthless. On the other hand, blue shop towels are the pure Detroit 70’s muscle power of paper towels. The 1970 Plymouth Hemi’ Cuda. You could dry an entire research vessel with just one square of these. You will never look at paper towels the same again.

SCOTT- Shop Towels, 12 rolls

17. Custom Lab Notebook

I like my music, dance moves, vehicles, and much more old school. My data recording is the same way. I record everything into a lab notebook. I print graphs from my computer and tape them in my notebook. I write notes and new research ideas in my notebook. It is way for me to engage with the information around me. At the Book Factory you can custom order hard cover lab notebooks and have your name embossed in gold on the front cover. Protip: Opt for the gridded pages.

18. iBomb

You will most definitely want to get you jam on. At 1:30 am sorting samples in the lab it will definitely be time to blast Beastie Boy’s Sabatoge. This little speaker is THE BEST portable speaker out there. It will fit in the palm of your hand and produce enough base to rival any Ice Cube’s low low. Protip: Develop a special field playlist.

iBomb(TM) EX350 High Quality Wireless Bluetooth 3.0 with 3.5mm AUX Input, Microphone, Micro SD Card Slot Include for MP3 Function, Rechargeable Super Bass Sounding Stainless Steel Mini Speaker (Silver)

19. eBags Mother Lode

My consistent fear is over packing. This is only second to my fear that others will think I am over packing. What you need is a piece of luggage that doesn’t look like you are packing a lot. Enter the Mother Lode. It is really phenomenal how much you can fit inside this carry on bag. Well made and with all the same properties of a Tardis. Protip: Choose the black color so stains will not show.

eBags Mother Lode TLS Mini 21″ Wheeled Duffel (Tropical Turquoise)

20. Chubby Bottom Coffee Mug

Let’s face it, you will be drinking a lot of coffee in the field. A skinny travel mug will be no good at sea. Always tipping over. You need something with a fat bottom that refuses that laughs in the face of a rocking boat. Great mug but with its fat bottom it will laugh at standard size cup holders. Protip: Buy a carbineer to attach it to your travel bag.

Stainless Steel Thermal Insulated Chubby Cup

21. Pelican Case

Pelican cases are water and crush proof to protect all your available assets. If they made larger ones you could ship your students in them. I get hours of enjoyment cutting the foam inserts to fit exactly around my field dissecting scope Protip: Choose one with roller and extendable handle for easy travel.

Pelican Storm Case 24.90″ x 23.70″ x 13.10″ Case w/out Foam – Black

22. Alcohol Resistant Markers

No not that kind of alcohol but that would be important too. Not much to say other than when you labeling the jar or bag of a valuable specimen you want that information to last forever. Protip: Buy many.

Alcohol Resistant Cryogenic Permanent Markers – Black – Pack of 6

23. Amscope

Why would you take an expensive Zeiss microscope to sea or the field? Great optics are find for the lab back home. But in the case of loss or damage you do not want you $10,000 Zeiss in the line of fire. Instead opt for the Amscope where you can purchase a dissecting scope for as little as $400. Protip: Purchase the digital camera through Amscope as well.

24. Your Own Blanket

Every ship supplies you with a scratch wool blanket from the 1920’s. I always bring my own because I prefer not to have skin rubbed off during the night and it is never quite clear to me when these were last cleaned. I use a fleece blanket because it packs up quite small and can double as a pillow on a flight. You can use a zip tie to keep it cinched. Protip: Order a fleece blanket with some flare so you know it is yours. I like the one below with a Bald Eagle on it. ‘MERICA!

American Eagle Print Comfy Polar Fleece Throw Blanket 60″ X 70″ – Bigger, Better, Softer – One Week Clearance Sale On Now!

25. Waterproof Smartphone Case

Without going into the painful details, I have lost two iPhones to water. Protip: Buy one now.

LifeProof Cases

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3-D Printing the Ulitmate Deep-Sea Christmas Tree https://deepseanews.com/2019/01/3-d-printing-the-ulitmate-deep-sea-christmas-tree/ Fri, 18 Jan 2019 02:46:39 +0000 https://www.deepseanews.com/?p=58792 Armed with the lab’s trusty Ultimaker 3-D printer, our imaginations, and endless source of inspiration that is deep-sea life and science, my lab and I…

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Armed with the lab’s trusty Ultimaker 3-D printer, our imaginations, and endless source of inspiration that is deep-sea life and science, my lab and I set out to create a deep-sea themed Christmas Tree.

The goal was to create a tree where the top represented the ocean’s surface and the base representing the abyssal floor. With a series of white, blue, and black ribbon and silver and blue miniature bulb ornaments, we created the effect of attenuated light as you move deeper. We wanted to make sure to include both a remotely operated vehicle on a lighted tether as well as lighted bathysphere. The tree also included a giant squid attacking a shark and whale fall complete with crabs and eels. We also made some tiny experimental wood falls to resemble the real ones we now have deployed all over the Gulf of Mexico.

You can print all of these decorations yourself. The complete collection can be found in my Thingiverse collection and include:

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The Continued Boondoggle of the Ocean Cleanup https://deepseanews.com/2019/01/boondoggle-ocean-cleanup/ https://deepseanews.com/2019/01/boondoggle-ocean-cleanup/#comments Sun, 06 Jan 2019 22:53:51 +0000 https://www.deepseanews.com/?p=58755 boon·dog·gle /ˈbo͞onˌdäɡəl/ noun:  work or activity that is wasteful or pointless but gives the appearance of having value. verb: waste money or time on unnecessary…

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boon·dog·gle
/ˈbo͞onˌdäɡəl/

noun:  work or activity that is wasteful or pointless but gives the appearance of having value.

verb: waste money or time on unnecessary or questionable projects.

The end of 2018 was tough for the Ocean Cleanup and its founder, inventor, and CEO Boyan Slat.   In September, the 2000 foot-boom and supposed plastic collection device, was first deployed about 240 nautical miles offshore of San Francisco where it was tested for two weeks.  The boom was then towed an additional 1,400 miles off the West Coast, about halfway between California and Hawaii, to begin collecting plastic in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.  This was supposed to be the first real-world proof of concept and trials of the device in the Pacific Garbage Patch.

Note that the previous prototype in the North Sea also failed at a shallower depth in calm seas. Of course, the next step is to build a bigger one and place it in rougher and deeper seas.

But in November, Ocean Cleanup stated the system was not holding plastic it collected.  This lack of plastic collection arose from the system moving too slowly at times to hold plastic within the U-shaped collection area.  The system is supposed to work by currents pushing plastics into the booms and nets.  Yet slow and complex currents in this region of the Pacific allowed plastics to float out of the device again.

In late December, 60-feet of boom had detached due to material fatigue.  Slat then indicated that this likely occurred due to wave action placing stress on the boom. The fracture was caused by material fatigue, he wrote. That’s likely because of the intense action of the waves that puts tremendous stress on objects in the water.

So to recap, the Ocean Cleanup system cannot either collect plastic or withstand the Pacific Ocean.

 In a September interview with NPR, he said the device averages about four inches per second, which his team has now concluded is too slow. The break in the barrier was due to an issue with the material used to build it.

However, both of these issues could have easily been avoided by more appropriate simulations, analyses, and information prior to construction and deployment.

When the material failure occurred, it wasn’t due to the result of a major Pacific storm. It was just normal wear and tear, Slat said

Understanding material stresses is a key component of an engineering project and one that is well understood before construction.   Note as well that the system is not something actually new, but is a modification of RO-BOOMS used in oil spill clean up since 1988.  I am confident the specifications for use and the ocean states the booms can operate in are well known by the manufacturer and previous users alike. [UPDATE: The booms used ar eno longer the RO-BOOMS.  It is a completely different design, a recent internal iteration which may explain the failure.]

And while currents are complex, a whole field of physical oceanography exists and provides readily the information to know the current regime in the area.  If more detailed temporal or spatial resolution is needed, the Ocean Cleanup team should have conducted more field studies to gain the data on the currents beforehand.    The Ocean Cleanup has always seemed poorly developed and executed, ignorant of the best science and data available, blatantly dismissive of critique, and far too hurried.

This rush to place the device in the ocean for both good publicity and for the feeling of accomplishing something is unproductive at best and dangerous at the worst.  And it clear that Slat is committed to an overly ambitious timeline no matter the consequences.

Founder & CEO Boyan Slat announced the news in a December 31 blog post, saying “setbacks like this are inevitable when pioneering new technology at a rapid pace”, and maintaining that ” these teething troubles are solvable, and the cleanup of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch will be operational in 2019″.
Read more at http://www.mysailing.com.au/latest/ocean-cleanup-s-20-million-plastic-catcher-breaks#1R7mecWOPU9tLbJl.99

I get no pleasure in saying I told you so but…

As noted in a recent article featuring Dr. Goldstein,

But a critic who has followed Slat’s project since he unveiled it more than five years ago said the failure was predictable and that systems deployed closer to shore stand a greater chance of slowing the deluge of plastics spilling into the world’s oceans.

“I certainly hope they will be able to get it to work, but this is a very difficult environment where equipment breaks, which is why you normally do things closer to shore, where things are easier to repair,” said [Dr.] Miriam Goldstein, director of ocean policy at the Center for American Progress

In 2014, Drs. Kim Martini and Drs. Miriam Goldstein, a physical and biological oceanographer, provided a detailed technical review of the feasibility study here at DSN. Note the two of them pointed nearly 4 years ago about these issues.

….The modeling studies severely underestimate potential loads and tensions on the moored array and boom. Therefore, they are insufficient to properly design a mooring concept and estimate potential costs…

Since the authors had access to ORCAFLEX, a professional software package to design offshore marine structures, a full-scale mooring array could have been modeled to estimate loads and tensions on the moored array, but was not.

Structural deformation of the array and loss of functionality by ocean currents are not addressed

Yeah. So these exact failures were predicted four years ago.

As this article clearly lays out, we should focus our funding and time, on more promising solutions to the ocean trash problem.

 

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How to recover when something goes very, very wrong at sea https://deepseanews.com/2017/03/how-to-recover-when-something-goes-very-very-wrong-at-sea/ https://deepseanews.com/2017/03/how-to-recover-when-something-goes-very-very-wrong-at-sea/#comments Sat, 11 Mar 2017 16:59:29 +0000 https://www.deepseanews.com/?p=57853 No shit, Sherlock. A staggering achievement – fishing for a 2m thing in 5000m water with a 10,000m line … very, very well done. https://t.co/gvKiU23H9B…

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No shit, Sherlock. A staggering achievement – fishing for a 2m thing in 5000m water with a 10,000m line … very, very well done. https://t.co/gvKiU23H9B

— Sheldon Bacon (@sheldonbacon) March 10, 2017

I could not have said it better myself. Last weekend the wire cable from which the CTD is suspended on the RRS James Cook snapped, sending the entire thing to the bottom of the sea. Even worse, the crew had strapped 32 additional instruments onto the cage to calibrate them for the upcoming mooring deployment! I have no doubt the language onboard was extraordinary in that moment. Fortunately cooler heads prevailed in the 55 hours that followed and the entire cage was recovered. THE ENTIRE THING.

This is just an incredible story that demonstrates the resourcefulness of the people who work on oceanographic research ships. Read the whole story (and more about the RAPID expedition) at  https://rapidexpedition2017.blogspot.co.uk/

Thumbs up and HELL YEAH are certainly appropriate after recovering a lot of equipment at the bottom of the sea.

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A research cruise as depicted by a high-seas adventure cartoonist? YAAASSSS https://deepseanews.com/2017/01/a-research-cruise-as-depicted-by-a-high-seas-adventure-cartoonist-yaaassss/ https://deepseanews.com/2017/01/a-research-cruise-as-depicted-by-a-high-seas-adventure-cartoonist-yaaassss/#comments Fri, 27 Jan 2017 20:18:07 +0000 https://www.deepseanews.com/?p=57721 It has now come to our attention that EVERY cruise needs a high seas adventure cartoonist. Lucy Bellwood’s comic on her three weeks at sea with the…

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[source: https://medium.com/@lubellwoo/mappin-the-floor-81a3b0472ca4#.mv9l23a4f]
It has now come to our attention that EVERY cruise needs a high seas adventure cartoonist. Lucy Bellwood’s comic on her three weeks at sea with the Schmidt Ocean Institute is just perfection. As the artist-at-residence on the R/V Falkor she describes the ship, the science and the techs/technology/scientists behind the science. And you will meet the Queen of the Multibeam.

Go to this site NOW.

https://medium.com/@lubellwoo/mappin-the-floor-81a3b0472ca4#.su63m7ohx

Sincerely, SCIENCE.

WANT MOAR? Follow out Lucy on the twitters or even better, sponsor her on Patreon.

 

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Can you hear me, Major Tom? https://deepseanews.com/2017/01/can-you-hear-me-major-tom/ Sat, 07 Jan 2017 00:37:55 +0000 https://www.deepseanews.com/?p=57635 “Can you “Here am I floating ’round my tin can Far above the moon Planet Earth is blue And there’s nothing I can do” -Space…

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“Can you “Here am I floating ’round my tin can
Far above the moon
Planet Earth is blue
And there’s nothing I can do”

-Space Oddity (Bowie)

A few weeks ago I took a visit to one of my favorite places in Los Angeles, The Huntington Library. Usually, I go because I am obsessed with the immaculate gardens and the 260 copies of “The Origin of the Species” in different editions and languages that the library houses. But this past visit had me excited for a different reason entirely.

As I came into the front entrance, I beheld “The Orbit Pavilion.” And without any background at all, I was like what in the heck is that big shiny thing??

Answer: One of the more interesting pieces of science communication I have seen in a while.

Created by Visual Specialists Dan Goods and David Delgado from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, The Orbit Pavilion is a Natiloid metal enclosure, with an inner lattice structure comprised of speakers.

For 19 Earth Science satellites, composer Shane Myrbeck created a unique sound track based on the data of their mission.  As the satellites orbit the earth in real time, their noises are broadcast through the speaker systems transmitting back to earth the crashing of a wave, a tree branch moving, a frog croaking. Each, an auditory representation of drought, hurricanes, ocean currents, and more. For the International Space Station, a sound track of human voices to represent the only current satellite with a human presence on board.

I found the experience uniquely visceral and an interesting medium to make the seemingly intangible satellites into something more real.

Double upside…I had Bowie stuck in my head the rest of the day…”Commencing countdown engines onnnnn…”

 

 

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Rocky Intertidal v.2.0 https://deepseanews.com/2016/12/rocky-intertidal-v-2-0/ Wed, 28 Dec 2016 20:55:11 +0000 https://www.deepseanews.com/?p=57588 Last year, DSN compatriot and Captain of the rag-tag crew over at Southern Fried Science, dropped a science outreach bomb. Dr. A.D. Thaler struck some ecological/technological brilliance in…

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The Process.

Last year, DSN compatriot and Captain of the rag-tag crew over at Southern Fried Science, dropped a science outreach bomb. Dr. A.D. Thaler struck some ecological/technological brilliance in the form of the Scanning the Sea project. In a word, I was inspired and wanted to do my part in pushing this magical ocean outreach toolbox forward and to the masses. Over the past year, and with Andrew’s much appreciated mentorship, my team and I have been working diligently to compile the next piece in the 3D puzzle.

I am stoked to unveil the Rocky Intertidal segment to the #ScanningtheSea library in the form of “3D Cabrillo.” Working at a National Park revealed the perfect opportunity to preserve the resources in this way and make them available for the public.

3D Cabrillo is a multifaceted educational resource and experience available to educators both near and far. In local collaboration with the Scripps Institute of Oceanography and the La Jolla Library, we utilized the #ScanningtheSea methodology to create biomodels of many of the prominent organisms found in our Rocky Intertidal Zone. Free downloadable versions of these models are available to the public on the park’s website at the 3D Cabrillo Biomodel Library. These models can be produced on any 3D printer. Our hope is that this will increase accessibility of ocean resources throughout our community and beyond.

In conjunction with the biomodel library, we developed an interactive Student Resource Manual. This takes students through a step-by-step guide on how to create and render 3D models. The 3D Cabrillo Student Resource Manual was specifically developed to connect students to the ocean ecosystems, while simultaneously teaching 3D printing techniques. We look forward to implementing this program with local schools during their upcoming Spring semester and putting their work on display for thousands of visitors to see and learn from.

Using the new tools available to us, we seek to reach the public in different and exciting ways. Our goal is that this initiative will highlight the public’s important role in awareness and stewardship of our ocean resources. By connecting nature and technology, we look to foster excitement in the next generation of environmental stewards.

A special thanks to Andrew D. Thaler for inspiring this project and his ongoing commitment to ocean science education. Onward Captain.

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