Multimedia Items
Black Tie Optional
The penguins on Macquarie Island in the Southern Ocean entertained and inspired WHOI Associates during an educational pleasure cruise to Tasmania, New Zealand, and the Sub-Antarctic Islands in the winter…
Read MoreThe Irminger Sea Buoy
It takes a tough buoy to stand tall when tip jets howl off the Greenland ice cap.
Read MorePicking Up the Pieces
Research technicians and ship’s crew work to recover the bottom section of a CLIMODE mooring from the Gulf Stream in October 2007. From the background (stern of the ship): senior…
Read MoreTake a Bow
On a calm day during the RESET 06 expedition in the Pacific Ocean which took a place in response to a volcanic eruption at the 9ºN vent site on the…
Read MoreMarking Time (Geologic)
WHOI research associate Terry Hammar (left) and research specialist Al Gagnon label sections of core tube prior to loading them into the barrel of the long core system on R/V…
Read MoreStay Focused
Laser light from a Raman spectrometer shines into a vial of water in Sheri White’s laboratory, focusing about mid-way through the sample. White and colleagues are using Raman spectroscopy to…
Read MoreAny cysts in the there?
Postdoctoral fellow Luciano Fernandes of the WHOI Biology Department handles a mud sample plucked from the Gulf of Maine during an October 2007 cruise on the research vessel Oceanus. As…
Read MoreTest for Echo
Christian Begler of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography deploys a pressure-and-inverted echo sounder (PIES) as a part of the German-led Meridional Overturning Variability Experiment (MOVE). The MOVE group joined WHOI…
Read MoreCrane Man
Able-bodied seaman Leo Fitz peers out from the controls of the crane on the research vessel Oceanus during an October 2007 cruise in the North Atlantic. Fitz and other members…
Read MorePole to Pole
On April 23, the outreach team of WHOI’s Polar Discovery web expeditions reached the farthest tip of inhabited land in North America Canadian Forces Station Alert. Today, exactly seven months…
Read MoreTakes a Licking and Keeps on Clicking
WHOI engineer Tom Hurst (pictured) and his colleague Mark Johnson created a customized attachment for using digital tags, or D-tags, to track the movements, behaviors, and vocalizations of manatees. The…
Read MoreInstead of Counting Sheep
In the wee hours of a September 2007 morning, WHOI research associate Kathryn Rose (foreground) and research assistant Marti Jeglinski (background) worked alongside coring technician Chris Moser of Oregon State…
Read MoreEavesdropping
MIT/WHOI graduate student Ari Shapiro takes a break from listening to the vocalizations of narwhals. His computer screen shows a spectrograma plot of sound frequency versus time of one of…
Read MoreDog Dish Afternoon
Bosun Peter Liarikos works with the “dog dish” so named for its shape on the new long-coring instrument on the research vessel Knorr. The dog dish contains all of the…
Read MorePole Position
WHOI science writer Mike Carlowicz interviews NOAA scientist Sigrid Salo during a flight from Resolute Bay, Canada, to Canadian Forces Station Alert. Along for the flight to Alert were (back…
Read MoreMuddy Past
Konrad Hughen, a paleoclimatologist in the WHOI Department of Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry, recently worked with archaeologist and anthropologists to show that Neanderthals probably did not die out from an…
Read MoreSteadying Hands
Able Seaman Clindor Cacho holds tight to the hook end of a winch on the research vessel Oceanus. Researchers and crew have sailed on the vessel several times this year…
Read MoreSpreading the Jelly
This “colonial” jelly a siphonophore of the Rosacea genus was spied in April 2006 by divers in the blue waters of the Sargasso Sea during a Census of Marine Zooplankton…
Read MoreKnow with the Flow
Students Jinbo Wang (left) and Evgeny Logvinov help conduct a Rossby wave experiment in the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory as part of a graduate course. Red dye was injected into…
Read MorePillars of a Community
WHOI seafloor geologist Dan Fornari and then-graduate student Tracey Gregg inspect a portion of a lava pillar that was generated during a 1991 eruption on the East Pacific Rise (EPR).…
Read MoreDancing Cows of the Sea
Despite their lumbering appearance, manatees are graceful swimmers and to many, a vanishing symbol of wild Florida. Researchers from WHOI and several science and conservation institutions hope digital tags, or…
Read MoreDay of Knight
A group of journalists from the Knight Science Journalism program assemble on the aft deck of the research vessel Oceanus for a tour in October 2007 with WHOI science writer…
Read MoreI Love the Night Life
The lights are on, but (almost) nobody’s home on a Saturday night in Woods Hole in March 2007. From left to right stand the Candle House and Visitor Center of…
Read MoreUnusual Commute to Work
Researchers and technicians from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration boarded and refurbished the “Middle Atlantic” buoy of the National Data Buoy Center network during an April 2007 expedition. WHOI…
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