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| Snow covers the foredeck of the Louis on the morning of
redeployment of mooring B.
Photo by Rick Krishfield, WHOI. |
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| Rico Amamio rigs the top sphere of the mooring for deployment.
Once the top sphere is released, the mooring will settle into position,
tethered to the ocean bottom for another year. Photo by Rick Krishfield, WHOI. |
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| Kris Newhall and Rick Krishfield attach the ITP profiler to the
wire. Photo by Chris Swannell. |
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| Kris Newhall and Brian MacKenzie guide the reinforced cable, while
Will Ostrom slips the ITP buoy over the ice hole to cap the mooring. Photo by Rick Krishfield, WHOI. |
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Cruise - 2006 Dispatches
Calendar
Dispatch 29, September 2, 2006
By Rick Krishfield, WHOI
A Long Day
The WHOI mooring team and the Louis Deck Crew are up before breakfast to rig
the deck for the redeployment of WHOI mooring B. The snow has subsided, but
has left its remnants on the foredeck. Not only is it slippery, but it is
also cold (-6 °C or 20 °F).
After breakfast, the deployment operation begins. The releases and glass
flotation spheres are readily deployed, and the wire rope segments are payed
out routinely. As time goes by, the sun begins to contribute some warmth,
but it seems that too often the deck is in the shadow of the ship’s
superstructure. Finally, just after noon, the 64” surface flotation sphere
is attached to the quick release hook and lowered to the surface of the
ocean. One quick pull, and the 3800 m (2 mile) long mooring system sinks 45
m (150 ft).
Immediately after the mooring deployment, it is time for an Ice-Tethered
Profiler (ITP) buoy deployment (see Dispatch 25). The weather is just too
good to pass up this opportunity. First, a quick helicopter survey finds a
3.5 m (11 ft) icefloe that looks sturdy enough to support an ITP --
hopefully for several years. Shortly thereafter, the WHOI mooring team,
crewmember Brian MacKenzie, Ian Green, and all of the ITP gear are
transported to the floe. The instrument is deployed without the aid of any
electricity using a mechanical wich through a 10” augered ice hole. In 4
hours the operation is completed and all are back onboard the Louis before 7
PM. As tired as we all are, we are pleased that we were able to complete
two deployment operations in a single day.
To cap off the long day, there is a Saturday night costume party in the
forward lounge. Unfortunately, the WHOI guys were too busy to dress for the
occasion, but fortunately there were many other creative and amusing
costumes to make up for them.
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