News Release
Robotic Vehicle Recovers Instruments and Data Locked in a Lava Flow
A lot of ocean science equipment goes into the water and never comes
back. Some of it was intended to stay; other times, the sea claims it
by force. Recently researchers used the WHOI-operated underwater
vehicle Jason to take back some instrumentsand hopefully some
scientific secretsthat had been claimed by a seafloor volcanic
eruption. In April 2007, scientists and technicians on the research
vessel Atlantis returned to a patch of seafloor on the East Pacific
Rise with Jason to find and rescue a trio of ocean-bottom seismometers
(OBSs). The earthquake-monitoring instruments had been glued to the
ocean bottom (1.6 miles/2,500 meters deep) by erupting lava that had
flowed and hardened around them. Scientists were particularly
interested in getting the OBSs back because they may have recorded the
moments when the undersea volcano erupted, a phenomenon that has rarely
been observed in progress. Marine geologists have been debating whether
this particular eruption happened all at once or over several months.
The 1,200-pound, robotically armed Jason successfully plucked two of
the OBSs and their data out of the hardened rock (click here for
video), so now the researchers may have a chance to settle the argument.
Related Links
» Rescue Mission on the Seafloor from Oceanus magazine
» Scientists "See" New Ocean Floor Just Before and After It Is Created
» 9 North OSC Expedition
» Remotely Operated Vehicle Jason
Originally published: May 1, 2007

