"Particle Flux, Coccolithophores, and
Climate: Linking Tiny Cells to Global Climate"
Ms. Dorinda Ostermann, WHOI, Geology and Geophysics
Department
Ms. Ostermann is a research specialist in the Paleoceanography
Research Group and the Arctic Group. She received her
B.A. in 1978 from Pomona College, in Botany. Her research
interests include micropaleontology; paleoclimatology;
stable isotope mass spectrometry; deep sea mooring design,
deployment and recovery, and laboratory automation.
For almost 18 years she has been using sediment traps
at sea to collect sinking particles in the Labrador
Sea, and relating that to climate data.
"High-Resolution Imaging with Underwater
Vehicles"
Mr. Chris Roman, WHOI, Applied Ocean Physics and Engineering
Department
Mr. Roman is a graduate student in the WHOI-MIT Joint
Graduate Program, earning his Ph.D. in the Applied Ocean
Physics and Engineering Department. He has a B.S. in
Mechanical Engineering from Virginia Tech in 1997, and
a M.S. in Mechanical Engineering in 1999 from the University
of California at San Diego. His research interests are
accurate under mapping, both photographic and bathymetric;
and the design and control of autonomous underwater
vehicles (AUVs).
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