Multimedia
If Only It Would Last
On an endless summer day in 2007, WHOI scientists gathered at the gateway to the Arctic Ocean in Longyearbyen (population 1,800), the largest settlement on the Norwegian island of Svalbard,…
Read MoreA Good Day’s Work
Steve Lambert, John Kemp, Rick Krishfield, and Jeff Pietro (l-r) of WHOI pause after successfully deploying an ice-tethered profiler (ITP) in an ice floe in the Beaufort Sea in August…
Read MoreThrough the Mist
On a foggy August day off the coast of Greenland, photographer Rachel Fletcher took a ride in one of R/V Knorr‘s small boats (also known as an RHIB) to photograph…
Read MoreSoaring Over the Bounding Main
On numerous voyages, WHOI physical oceanographer Phil Richardson had marveled at albatrosses’ ability to soar into high winds and remain aloft seemingly forever without ever flapping their wings. A sailor…
Read MoreOcean Acidification’s Natural Laboratory
Research associate Kathryn A. Rose preserves coral samples at the University of Panama’s NAOS laboratory during a expedition to the Gulf of Panama’s Pearl Islands in June 2011. Rose’s work…
Read MoreReach for it
Performing a tricky maneuver in rising seas during Alvin‘s recovery to R/V Atlantis, swimmers Dave Walter and Allison Heater reach for the hoisting line from the ship’s A-frame; the two…
Read MoreShining Rivers
From the air, the Fraser River Delta and the Straight of Georgia near Vancouver, Canada, reflect the evening sun, with the Coast Range mountains in the background right. WHOI chemist…
Read MoreHearing from the Experts
In June, WHOI senior scientist Don Anderson (third from left), Director of the Cooperative Institute for the North Atlantic Region, and other expert witnesses testified before the the House Subcommittee…
Read MoreFirst Light
Researcher Emily Peacock took this image of an icy sunrise partway through a 65-day Antarctic research cruise aboard the icebreaker Nathaniel B. Palmer, part of a program studying Climate Variability…
Read MoreThe Calm Before the Storm
Postdoctoral scholar Peter van Hengstum of the Coastal Systems Group prepares to deploy sediment traps in Oyster Pond near WHOI’s Quissett Campus. A group of researchers and students, led by…
Read MoreRainy Day Tour
Gusty winds and rain did not dampen the enthusiasm of visitors waiting to tour the R/V Knorr at the WHOI dock on August 7, 2011. More than 750 people came…
Read MoreSeaBED Away
WHOI Scientist Hanumant Singh (left) and graduate student Clayton Kunz steady a SeaBED autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) as it is hoisted above the deck of the icebreaker Oden during the…
Read MoreThe Wake of Another Storm
The Water Street drawbridge was carried away by a high tide during the hurricane of 1938. It was more than a year before cars could use the street again, but…
Read MoreSampling the Fraser River
MIT/WHOI Joint Program graduate students Britta Voss (back) and Sarah Rosengard (front) sample the Fraser River at McBridge in the upper reaches of the Rocky Mountain Trench in June 2011.…
Read MoreWe Felt It Too
The Ocean Bottom Seismology Laboratory at WHOI led by John Collins specializes in building and operating seismometers to record ground-shaking seismic waves on the seafloor. The lab almost always has…
Read MoreColorful Cobble
This tricolor rock resulted from volcanic activity along the Gakkel Ridge at the bottom of the Arctic Ocean between Russia and the North Pole. The black middle portion is the…
Read MoreMeeting the Next Generation
Vice President for Marine Facilities & Operations Robert Munier (left) and R/V Knorr Captain Adam Seamans (right) welcome aboard Charles Vest during an August visit from members of the National Research…
Read MoreLearning the Ropes
Students in the MIT/WHOI Joint Program in Oceanography learn how to deploy and operate a rosette sampler during the 2011 Jake Pierson Summer Cruise. The device is a mainstay of…
Read MoreStarlet Stressors
The starlet sea anemone, a small animal found in salt marshes on Cape Cod, is a close relative of reef-building corals. Like other animals, corals and sea anemones can be…
Read MoreListening to the Ocean
A group of scientists and engineers from WHOI, University of Washington, and Penn State checks a ship-towed sound source in the test pool at WHOI’s Reinhart Coastal Research Center. The…
Read MoreGoing to Extremes
To really understand the cycle of life in the deep sea, researchers need samples to measure chemistry and DNA. And they aren’t after just any samples; the ones with the…
Read MoreA Heck of an Upstream Swim
An aerial view of Hell’s Gate from the Airtram in British Columbia, taken during Bernhard Peucker-Ehrenbrink’s 2011 Fraser River expedition. At this location, the Fraser River is funneled through a…
Read MoreAlvin Gets the Once-Over
A curious “Dumbo” octopus (Grimpoteuthis) investigates deep-submergence vehicle Alvin during a dive to hydrothermal vent fields in the East Pacific Rise in November, 2007. During this research cruise aboard R/V…
Read MoreFree-Flowing River
As part of his wide-ranging study of the world’s rivers, WHOI scientist Bernhard Peucker-Ehrenbrink took an expedition to British Columbia, Canada. Shown here is the Chilcotin River—one of the prime…
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