Multimedia Items
Marine Microbes
WHOI biogeochemist Mak Saito prepares to drill through six feet of ice to take a water sample during 2009 fieldwork in Antarctica that he later analyzed for dissolved metals. Saito…
Read MoreDoing It Right
Senior welder Geoffrey Ekblaw welds a seam on a titanium main junction box for the new Alvin. The human-occupied research submersible is undergoing a comprehensive upgrade, including a new frame…
Read MoreA Hull of a REMUS
Senior engineer Ben Allen recently tested a specially equipped REMUS 100 autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) in the test pool at the Rinehart Coastal Research Center. This particular vehicle is designed to…
Read MoreSounds of the Sound
Aran Mooney looks out across gray Nantucket Sound towards a tower built to monitor meteorological conditions where the company Cape Wind plans to install energy-generating wind turbines. WHOI biologists Mooney…
Read MoreDeep-sea Detectives
In 2010, WHOI scientists Adam Soule and Dan Lizarralde searched for evidence that magma from below the seafloor had penetrated up into the sediments of the Guaymas Basin in the…
Read MoreBongo Dip
Marine science technician Marshal Chaidez signals to a crewmate running a winch from a control room overlooking the fantail of the U.S. Coast Guard icebreaker Healy to deploy a set of…
Read MoreAlvin Takes Shape
With the installation of Alvin‘s new personnel sphere onto its modified titanium frame, shown here being attached in November 2012, the country’s only deep-diving submersible began to regain its familiar…
Read MoreCape to Cape
On Tuesday, January 15, R/V Knorr left Cape Cod for a 26-day transit to Cape Town, South Africa. From there, it will conduct science missions out of Cape Town; Montevideo,…
Read MoreGroundwater: The River No One Sees
Groundwater feeds the ocean in unseen ways—carrying nutrients, pollutants, and clues about environmental change. WHOI scientists use coral to track its flow.
Read MoreThe B12 Claw
WHOI scientists recently discovered a previously unknown piece of metabolic machinery that allows algae to grow in the ocean. The cobalamin acquisition protein 1 (CBA1) grabs vitamin B12 out of…
Read MoreReel It In
At the end of an Alvin dive, the deep-diving submersible needs some help returning to the deck of its support ship, R/V Atlantis. To get its 35,000 pounds out of the water…
Read MoreNow You’re Cooking
WHOI scientists Adam Soule, Dan Lizarralde, and Jeff Seewald used a device developed by WHOI engineer Marshall Swartz to gather high-resolution images of seafloor organisms in the Gulf of California…
Read MoreFramed
In September, WHOI took delivery of a very important piece of equipment: the frame for the redesigned and upgraded submersible Alvin. Shown here next to Alvin‘s support ship, R/V Atlantis, the frame had…
Read MoreHold the Cesium
After the earthquake and nuclear release in northeast Japan, many people have begun looking at foods like this tuna appetizer in a very different way. WHOI chemist Ken Buesseler spent…
Read MoreStar on Ice
A brittle star clings to a thin stalk of coral amid chunks of ice on the Indonesian research vessel Beruna Jaya IV. It was collected during a 2010 cruise to…
Read MoreShells of Their Former Cells
In July 2011, scientists studying the Arctic discovered a massive phytoplankton bloom under meter-thick ice, where they thought there wouldn’t be enough light for the plants to grow. WHOI biologist…
Read MoreSounding the Ocean
WHOI research engineer Fred Jaffre works on a miniaturized sonar board originally developed to measure currents in the ocean. Recently, biologist Gareth Lawson and a team that includes Jaffre, Andone Lavery,…
Read MoreExploring the Gulf Stream
Scientists at WHOI have been exploring the Gulf Stream and its connections to global circulation and climate patterns for decades. Physical oceanographer Arthur “Rocky” Miller, shown here in 1960, came…
Read MoreFabulous Phaeodarians
Four phaeodarians display their intricate silica skeletons, each about 1 millimeter in diameter—easily visible to the naked eye. They are protists, unicellular organisms that are abundant in oceans worldwide, and…
Read MoreA Bite out of Biofilms
“Biofouling” by barnacles and other organisms begins with a biofilm, a layer of microbes adhering to a ship hull or other hard surface. Biofilms form (1) when bacteria settle onto…
Read MoreWater Everywhere?
In May 2012, WHOI convened a Morss Colloquium to examine the issue of Earth’s water cycle. Afterwards, a panel that included (left to right) Anthony Patt, International Institute for Applied…
Read MoreTaking a Dip
In October 2012, WHOI research specialist Bob Nelson used a piece of super-clean Teflon netting to sample a sheen of oil on the surface of the Gulf of Mexico. The…
Read MoreReef Indicator
The blackbacked butterflyfish (Chaetodon melannotus) often feeds on soft corals. During a trip to the Farasan Banks in the Saudi Arabian waters of the Red Sea in 2009, WHOI biologist…
Read MoreSharp-eyed Snails
Planktonic snails called atlantid heteropods live in the open ocean far from the surface, the sea floor, and the shore. Their transparent shells reveal red V-shaped ovaries in one animal…
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