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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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Frozen white molasses

Frozen white molasses

From the air, Greenland’s ice sheet looked like white molasses oozing down the mountainside and into the sea. Researchers are investigating Greenland’s glacial lakes, which form atop the ice sheet…

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Celebrating Science

Celebrating Science

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution’s Ocean Science Exhibit Center Manager Kathy Patterson and Senior Engineer Don Peters (in baseball caps at center and far right) explain the new Auto Detection Mooring…

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Sledding for sediments

Sledding for sediments

George Hampson, left, and Steve Page carefully extract collected sediment from the deep-sea epibenthic sled.  The sled, developed in the mid-1960s, was towed horizontally to collect the uppermost part of…

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Volcano mapping

Volcano mapping

A one-armed protractor, used for laying out ship tracks,  rests on top of a map of the ‘Rumble III’ volcano, located in the Kermadec arc, north northeast of New Zealand. In…

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Jason and the volcano

Jason and the volcano

The remotely operated vehicle Jason is lowered in the Pacific Ocean in 2006 to explore an erupting underwater volcano near the Marianas Islands. Sensors left near the site indicated that…

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Ceremony at sea

Ceremony at sea

A pollywog is a person that has not crossed the equator on a ship.  Here a pollywog endures a shower of icewater during equator crossing ceremony on the Research Vessel…

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The frozen continent

The frozen continent

In Antarctica, fierce winds blow plumes of snow out to sea and erase most of the 400 mile long Ross Ice Shelf from view. As global climate warms, polar researchers…

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Bonding at sea

Bonding at sea

New graduate students in the MIT/WHOI Joint Program gather alongside ship’s crew on the deck of the Corwith Cramer for the annual Sea Education Association (SEA) Jake Peirson Summer Cruise. They…

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Coral clues to climate change

Coral clues to climate change

The Northern Star Coral, or Astrangia poculata, seen here with polyps extended, is a unique cold water coral that occurs in Woods Hole, MA, with (brown) and without (white) symbiotic…

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Rock (and fossils) of Ages

Rock (and fossils) of Ages

Assistant scientist Alison Shaw at work using the ion microprobe, part of the Northeast National Ion Microprobe Facility (NENIMF) at WHOI. The facility is one of the National Ion Microprobe…

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‘Jedi’ at sea

'Jedi' at sea

R/V Atlantis third mate Rick Bean oversees the firing of expired flares by researcher Wenlu Zhu, of the Geology & Geophysics department, during Atlantis’ 2009 New Years Eve commemorations. The…

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Robot show and tell

Robot show and tell

Ben Allen (right), of the Applied Ocean Physics & Engineering department, shows a group of students one of the REMUS (Remote Environmental Monitoring Units) vehicles, which are designed for coastal…

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Digging down to look back

Digging down to look back

In April 2007, WHOI chemist  Tim Eglinton (red cap) and research associate Daniel Montluçon worked to extract a sediment core from the bottom of a frozen lake in the Mackenzie…

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No waves, just ripples

No waves, just ripples

Clouds ripple in the skies above the research vessel Atlantis during its spring 2009 cruise to the Galapagos islands. (Photo by Lance Wills, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)

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