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Take the A-Frame

Scientific instruments go into the water off the back of the ship, from an area called the fantail. Here, a pair of bongo nets— they look like a pair of drums—is going over to collect krill in the Bering Sea. The time to catch krill is nighttime, when they swim up toward the surface to…

Scientific instruments go into the water off the back of the ship, from an area called the fantail. Here, a pair of bongo nets— they look like a pair of drums—is going over to collect krill in the Bering Sea. The time to catch krill is nighttime, when they swim up toward the surface to look for food. A motor makes a loud throbbing, humming sound as the giant A-frame tilts out over the water. The research team aboard the vessel — the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Healy — is studying the impacts of climate change on the Bering Sea ecosystem.

(Photo by Chris Linder, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)

Image Credit: Unknown
Date: April 28, 2009
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Take the A-Frame

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