A 3-D Underwater Soundscape
A large-scale experiment sheds light on sound in the coastal ocean
By Lonny Lippsett / Amy E. Nevala |
August 2, 2007
Slideshow
Slideshow
- John Kemp (red vest, center right), along with members of the WHOI mooring group and the ship's crew, coordinates the deployment of a University of Miami buoy that measures air and water properties a few meters above and below the ocean surface. (Photo by Hans Graber, University of Miami)
- WHOI engineer John Kemp got his hands (and knees) dirty, leading efforts to deploy 62 moorings for the experiment. Here, he instructs WHOI Summer Student fellow Wilken-Jon von Appen, one of six students involved in the expedition who, with help from the ship's crew, actually got to deploy a mooring themselves. (Photo by Karen Johnson, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)
- The WHOI mooring group deploys a University of Miami mooring from the research vessel Knorr. The instrument transmits acoustic signals at multiple frequencies. (Photo by Karen Johnson, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)