|
 |
 |
| The surface floatation package arrives at the surface exactly
where expected. |
 |
| At the ship's rail, Will Ostrom and Bosun Rico Amamio secured
handling lines to the sphere. |
 |
| The ship's crane wire hooks to a lifting eye on the sphere. |
 |
| Kris Newhall tending to his releases which were the last gear to
be recovered. |
|
All photos by Rick Krishfield, WHOI. |
Cruise - 2006 Dispatches
Calendar
Dispatch 9, August 13, 2006
By Will Ostrom
Mooring Day
We expected to be at the Beaufort Slope (BS-3) mooring location
(approximately 71.4 °N, 152 °W) before breakfast, but heavy ice conditions has
impeded our path and slowed the ship considerably. So after breakfast, the Captain decided that a
helicopter flight was needed to survey the ice conditions at the mooring
site, in order to determine whether a recovery would even be feasible. Chris Swannell (helicopter pilot), Scott Payment (ice observer), Sarah
Zimmermann (Chief Scientist) and Rick Krishfield (WHOI) flew to the site and
discovered that the ice was much less concentrated and broken up than the
ice that the Louis was presently mired in. That was very good news for our
mooring team who were anxious to recover the sub-surface mooring for WHOI
Scientist Robert Pickart.
In seawater only 147 m (480 ft) deep, the mooring's mechanical
design consisted simply of a large floatation sphere at the top, an 85 m
(280 ft) long length of wire rope, several glass flotation spheres, and an
acoustic release attached to a large anchor. Attached to the top of the
sphere was a profiling winch system to measure the seawater properties above
the sphere, and a sonar instrument which determined the thickness of the ice
drifting overhead. Oceanographic instrumentation attached to the mooring
measured ocean temperatures, salinities, currents and direction over the
previous year, and sea level variations from bottom pressure measurements.
All this data was recorded internally, so it was necessary to recover the
mooring to obtain the results. To read about the scientific objectives of
the Beaufort Slope project visit the Arctic Edge website.
At noontime we arrived at the site. The ship's position relative to
where the mooring would surface was critical. The desire was to have it
come up approximately 20 m (65 ft) off the ship's starboard bow. With
excellent ship handling from Captain Andrew McNeill on the bridge, the
mooring came up just where it was expected. The mooring's bottom end with
several 17" glass flotation spheres soon arrived on the surface. The ship
then maneuvered alongside the large sphere and hooked it with the crane.
The sphere was un-shackled from the mooring wire and stowed on deck. The
Lebus winch was then brought into play, winding up the wire rope through a
block hung in the A-frame. The scientific instruments on the wire were
removed, and the remainder of the mooring was recovered with the ship's
crane. The deck operations were completed in only 35 minutes from start to
finish, and then it was time to open the instruments and see what
information was collected for the past year.
|
|