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A fluid environment

A fluid environment

Participants in the 2010 Geophysical Fluid Dynamics (GFD) program gather on the Walsh Cottage porch for a group photo. The GFD Program, which began in 1959 at WHOI, is an…

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What is it?

What is it?

Water-collecting cylinders called Niskin bottles stand ready, spring-loaded caps open at both ends. They are most often attached to a CTD rosette sampler–a frame holding a circle of bottles around…

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Core product

Core product

Aboard the Knorr, from foreground, WHOI researchers Bill Curry and Jim Broda, along with Rolf Ambjornsen of the Norwegian marine services company Odim, help retrieve the first sediment ever collected…

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Playing tag

Playing tag

To learn more about what whales do when they dive beneath the surface, scientists use a digital acoustic recording tag, or D-tag.  The small device, designed and developed at WHOI,…

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Deep Sea Jewelry?

Deep Sea Jewelry?

Transparent as glass and just as fragile, a meter-long chain of salps loops into a crystal necklace for an Antarctic Neptune. These gelatinous animals filter food out of the ocean…

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An afternoon of science

An afternoon of science

MIT/WHOI Joint Program student in Biology, Jamie Becker, (center with light blue shirt) discusses his research with guests at the recent Afternoon of Science, during the science poster reception under…

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Rapid trip to measure oil droplets

Rapid trip to measure oil droplets

WHOI Senior Scientist Cabell Davis (left) and Joint Program graduate student Nick Loomis flank an ROV mounted with a small digital holographic camera before a rapid research trip in the…

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Giving testimony on the Gulf oil spill

Giving testimony on the Gulf oil spill

Marine chemist Christopher Reddy, Director of the WHOI Coastal Ocean Institute and specialist on the fate of petroleum in the marine environment, is studying the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, part…

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New crack

New crack

Ian Joughin of the Polar Science Center Applied Physics Lab at the University of Washington (UW), examines a large, angular crack in the ice during a 2008 expedition to Greenland.…

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A fish-eye lens view

A fish-eye lens view

In this fish-eye lens view, the icebreaker Oden is headed north into what will be thicker ice during a 2007 expedition to the Arctic Seafloor. At the top of the…

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Dusk over the Bering Sea

Dusk over the Bering Sea

At rest: A multicorer, an oceanographic sampler that drives cylindrical tubes into the seafloor to take multiple sediment samples at once, sits on the deck of the R/V Thomas G.…

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Spray glider studies the Gulf spill

Spray glider studies the Gulf spill

Graduate students in the MIT/WHOI Joint Program practice deploying a Spray glider. A Spray glider, a sensor-equipped autonomous underwater vehicle, was recently deployed to the Gulf of Mexico to gather…

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Oil sample arrives at WHOI

Oil sample arrives at WHOI

WHOI researchers are making major contributions to efforts to monitor and characterize effects of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. In June, WHOI researchers took a…

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A torrent of crabs

A torrent of crabs

After a six-month dry season in coastal Panama, the first rains bring masses of bright red land crabs boiling out of their burrows in the forest and scrambling across the…

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A whale of an anchor

A whale of an anchor

WHOI welder Tony Delane works on the mooring anchor framework for a multifunction node (MFN) and buoy system that will help researchers monitor the activity of North Atlantic right whales,…

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El Austral and Lulu

El Austral and Lulu

El Austral, formerly RV Atlantis, at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) dock with RV Lulu. Atlantis was the first WHOI research vessel and the first ship built specifically for…

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Going deep

Going deep

Muddy sediment from beneath the seafloor pokes out of one of the first long cores collected in 2007 by the then-new long corer sampling system on the research vessel Knorr.…

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Panning for worms

Panning for worms

Research specialist Stace Beaulieu (at left), Summer Student Fellow Eric Rozell, and other students examine invertebrates they sieved from the sand and sediments in the tidal channel at Woodneck Beach…

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Making ocean life count

Making ocean life count

Dolioletta gegenbauri, a planktonic colonial tunicate that filters phytoplankton to eat, is about two inches (5 centimeters) long. This species was one of many collected in deep water during a Census of…

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Feeling GRUVEE

Feeling GRUVEE

The Human Occupied Vehicle Alvin and the R/V Atlantis work in the waters off Galapagos Islands in April 2010 during the Galapagos Ridge Undersea Volcanic Eruptions Expedition (GRUVEE). A team…

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Oily tidal pools

Oily tidal pools

Oil washed into the West Falmouth marsh and tide pools after a 1969 spill, with disastrous consequences for these small marine animals in a tidal pool. Though the marsh now…

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