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Cooking up marine asphalt

Cooking up marine asphalt

Remnants of natural explosions of oil from the seafloor (asphalt volcanoes) are now being observed. Marine chemist and Coastal Institute director Chris Reddy and Dave Valentine of University of California,…

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Who is observing whom?

Who is observing whom?

During a dive to the deep-sea hydrothermal vents at Guyamas Basin (Gulf of California, Mexico), an octopus eyes the submersible Alvin. The dive was conducted as part of an R/V…

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Orca rising

Orca rising

Orcas (Orcinus orca) are toothed whales that hunt large single prey, such as fish, squid, penguins and seals.  Marine chemist Mak Saito photographed this Orca on McMurdo Sound sea ice…

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Hurricane season

Hurricane season

A look at Silver Beach in North Falmouth, Ma., after the hurricane of 1938 shows the extensive damage a hurricane can do to the coast.  Researchers at Woods Hole Oceanographic…

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Charting their course

Charting their course

Jordan Aoyama, a student in the Woods Hole Partnership Education Program (PEP) sponsored by the Woods Hole Diversity Advisory Committee, learns sextant skills from R/V Tioga captain Ken Houtler during…

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Long legs, short body

Long legs, short body

On a 2006 cruise to explore the deep Celebes Sea, expedition scientists collected this 3-centimeter (1.25-inch) isopod — a relative of land-based pill bugs — using a collection chamber mounted…

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Tag, you’re it!

Tag, you're it!

Researcher Leigh Hickmott tags a pilot whale using a digital recording tag (D-Tag) during the Mediterranean 2009 research cruise — part of an ongoing, international and interdisciplinary effort to better…

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A Flash in the Gut

A Flash in the Gut

In 2007 WHOI biologist Laurence Madin led a team of scientists and photographers from the U.S. and the Philippines on an expedition to explore biodiversity in the deep Celebes Sea.…

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Spy-hopping

Spy-hopping

Orcas (Orcinus orca), also called Killer Whales, sometimes spy-hop — hold their heads and upper bodies out of the water to look for prey. This Orca bides his time as…

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Flying high

Flying high

An aerial view of Canada’s Mackenzie River Delta, where marine geochemists Tim Eglinton, Daniel Montluçon, and geologist Liviu Giosan are looking for clues to past climate change. During 2009 Spring…

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Look and learn

Look and learn

Oceanographer Emeritus and biologist George Hampson (center) and Hovey Clifford (blue shirt) retired WHOI  dockmaster and present CPR teacher and EMT  showing  Summer Student Fellows Yadira Ibarra (left) and Abigail…

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Bubbly ‘fire bodies’

Bubbly 'fire bodies'

Looking like a collection of bubbles, this pyrosome (the name means “fire body”) is a cylindrical colony, 7 centimeters (2.75 inch) long, made up of individual animals (the “bubbles”.) Each…

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What a summer!

What a summer!

Students from the WHOI Summer Student Fellowship Program and the Woods Hole Partnership Education Program (PEP) spent a sunny August day out on R/V Tioga learning basic oceanographic sampling techniques…

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The lives of larvae

The lives of larvae

MIT/WHOI Joint Program student Christine Mingione of the Biology Department, collects larvae samples in spat collector bags. Many familiar marine invertebrates such as shellfish have lesser known larval stages that…

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Inner-space colonies

Inner-space colonies

They look like space stations, but actually are colonial forms of single-celled organisms called radiolarians, collected in the deep Celebes Sea. The white blobs are individual cells, and the geodesic…

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Ready, set, race!

Ready, set, race!

Norman Farr, of the Applied Ocean Physics & Engineering department, shows a group of elite runners from Kenya  — (from left to right) Richard Limo, James Koskei, Felix Limo, Gilbert…

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Woods Hole Consortium

Woods Hole Consortium

Boats fill Eel Pond in the village of Woods Hole —home to several world-renowned research organizations, including the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and Woods Hole Research Center. In…

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Silent buoy

Silent buoy

Hydrophones on mooring lines could detect whale sounds but frequently it is too noisy. The problem was that in often violent seas, surface buoys moved up and down, pulling the…

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Steady as she goes

Steady as she goes

On board the R/V Thomas Thompson cruise TN230 on the Kermadec Arc north of New Zealand, marine geologist Dan Fornari (in boots) steadies the imaging and sampling vehicle TowCam during…

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Fragile collection

Fragile collection

Scientists of the “Inner Space Speciation Project”—a four-week expedition led by WHOI biologist Larry Madin to look for new species in Southeast Asia’s Celebes Sea—used a wide range of methods…

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Microbial Trojan Horses

Microbial Trojan Horses

Aquatic environments pose challenges for disease-causing bacteria that are adapted to live in humans and other animals. One of those is being eaten by protists, single-celled organisms that are the…

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The airplane that studied the ocean

The airplane that studied the ocean

Airplanes don’t typically come to mind when people think of ocean science. But for 25 years, beginning in 1945, WHOI maintained five planes for research. Read more about this former…

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Antarctica: the coldest place on Earth

Antarctica: the coldest place on Earth

The main reason why Antarctica is colder than the Arctic is that Antarctica is a continent surrounded by an ocean. The Arctic is an ocean almost completely surrounded by continents…

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Flapping Finnegan

Flapping Finnegan

Turtles, dolphins, and seals are masters at maneuvering in the water. So it’s no surprise that Stephen Licht, then a graduate student in the MIT/WHOI Joint Program, looked to them…

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