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         Oceanography Research Submersibles:     more detail
  1. Research submersibles in oceanography, (Contribution of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, no. 2456) by Robert D Ballard, 1970
  2. Future Needs in Deep Submergence Science: Occupied and Unoccupied Vehicles in Basic Ocean Research by Committee on Future Needs in Deep Submergence Science, National Research Council, 2004-03-05
  3. Undersea Vehicles and National Needs by Committee on Undersea Vehicles and National Needs, National Research Council, 1996-11-19
  4. Underwater exploration: An entry from Thomson Gale's <i>Gale Encyclopedia of Science, 3rd ed.</i> by Gillian S. Holmes, 2004
  5. The unmanned submersible as an Arctic research tool by Gordon M Gray, 1972
  6. Woods Hole, Mass. Oceanographic Institution. Reference by Scott C Daubin, 1969
  7. Summary reports of vessels, aircraft flights, and submarine dives during 1972 (Technical memorandum / Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution) by W. M Dunkle, 1973
  8. Summary reports of vessels, aircrafts and submarines during 1967 (Technical memorandum WHOI) by W. M Dunkle, 1969
  9. Summary report of vessels, aircraft flights and submarine dives during 1973 (Technical memorandum WHOI) by W. M Dunkle, 1974
  10. NR-1 submersible cruise report for Offshore Operators Committee study of chemosynthetic marine ecosystems in the Gulf of Mexico by James M. Brooks, Mahlon C. Kennicutt II, and Robert R. Bidigare by J. M Brooks, 1987

41. 481 Geology And Geophysics
oceanographic data, FAQs on oceanography and meteorology research fields are tectonic,petrological and drilling, and sea floor observations using submersibles.
http://eels.lub.lu.se/ei/481.html
Engineering E-Library, Sweden
481 Geology and Geophysics

42. Use Of Manned Submersibles In Support Of Oceanographic Research: 1930 – 2002, V
Use of manned submersibles in support of oceanographic research 1930 – 2002.
http://vitiaz.ru/congress/en/thesis/62.html
Use of manned submersibles in support of oceanographic research: 1930 – 2002
main supporting organisation committee programme ... photos Our colleagues A. Sagalevich (P.P. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia)
D. Walsh (International Maritime Inc., Oregon, USA) The primary advantage of the maimed submersible is that it permits the trained mind and eye to work in situ at great depths m the sea This is especially important in the geological and biological disciplines where "field work" requires the presence of the researcher at the work site. This paper will trace the historical development of these underwater research platforms and the work they have accomplished in the past 70 years. The first use of a manned submersible for oceanographic research on the cable was professor William Beebe's Bathysphere in 1930 – 1934 at Bermuda. Over the next seven decades the manned submersible evolved from bathyscaphs used by the French, US and Soviet navies, 1953 – 1982, to smaller more efficient vehicles, now in service throughout the world. Despite the advent of unmanned remotely operated vehicles (ROV's) and autonomous unmanned vehicles (AUV's) there is still an im­portant role for the manned platform. At present about 12 are operating in support of oceanography worldwide. The history of real free swimming maimed submersibles began with the histori­cal dive of the bathyscaph "FNRS-2" in October, 1948 on 3515 meters depth. Dur­ing the next 55 years more man 150 submersibles were built worldwide and used 35 for scientific research, commercial diving and Navy operations.

43. Current Vessels: Submersibles - Jason/Medea
Current research submersibles Trieste. Parts of this page utilize JavaScript or another scripting language. If you are seeing this message it means that your browser is not JavaScript enabled.
http://www.onr.navy.mil/focus/ocean/vessels/submersibles4.htm
Oceanography Space Sciences Blow the Ballast! CyberMail ... Teachers' Corner
Current Research: Submersibles - Trieste
Almost forty years ago, the Trieste and its two occupants, (then) U.S. Navy Lieutenant Don Walsh and Swiss scientist Jacques Piccard, journeyed to the bottom of Challenger Deep in the Marianas Trench, the deepest point known in the ocean. No one has been back since. Read Department of Defense and Department of the Navy press releases as Trieste continued to set and break its own records for deep-sea dives in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
The Trieste at sea. (Office of Naval Research photo)
January 8, 1958
During a series of dives off the coast of Naples, the Trieste, engaged in an ONR research program, makes some puzzling discoveries about sound properties and ocean life near the floor of the Mediterranean Sea.
August 23, 1958

44. Current Vessels: Submersibles - ALVIN
Current research submersibles ALVIN. Read the exciting story about ALVIN v. theSwordfish, straight from a 1967 Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution press
http://www.onr.navy.mil/focus/ocean/vessels/submersibles2.htm
Oceanography Space Sciences Blow the Ballast! CyberMail ... Teachers' Corner
Current Research: Submersibles - ALVIN
Read the exciting story about ALVIN v. the Swordfish, straight from a 1967 Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution press release. A scientist onboard ALVIN at the time of the attack tells the story During ALVIN Dive No. 202 on July 6, 1967, the submarine was attacked and rammed by a swordfish (scientific name Xiphias Gladius). The attack took place on the Blake Plateau off the east coast of Florida at a depth of 2,000 feet. ALVIN had descended to the sea floor in that location to undertake a geological and geophysical survey of the area. The crew of the submarine was Marvin McCamis, pilot; Valentine Wilson, co-pilot; Edward F. K. Zarudzki, scientific observer. ALVIN reached the sea bottom at 2:30 p.m. It was driven about 10 feet ahead of its initial landing point in order to take photographs of a single, large deep-sea coral specimen. I was taking a picture through the bow porthole when I heard a scraping sound on the hull. Thinking that the noise had been caused by the submarine drifting and scraping over the sea floor, I looked down and saw that we were stationery and on the bottom. Simultaneously with the noise, the co-pilot who was watching out through the starboard porthole, recoiled from it exclaiming: "We have been hit by a fish!" Indeed, outside the starboard porthole I saw a large fish, apparently captive, violently trying to disengage itself and in the process tearing some of the skin and flesh of its back. A small amount of blood was flowing out of these tears.

45. Maritime Topics On Stamps, Submersibles Bathyscaphe Bathyskaph
Maritime Topics On Stamps research submersibles! Submarines, Part 1. The 'Trieste' at the deepest point of all oceans! The research submersibles are the first, more peaceful part of the theme
http://baegis.ag.uidaho.edu/~myron/html/tauch.htm
Maritime Topics On Stamps :
Research Submersibles!
Submarines, Part 1 The 'Trieste' at the deepest point of all oceans!
The research submersibles are the first, more peaceful part of the theme 'submarines'. The second part containing the military submarines will follow, see below.
The dream of mankind, to explore the dark depths of the oceans, surely is old as the dream of flying. Around the Mediterranian exists a wellknown legend of Alexander the Great: 'The great king sat for 70 days in his boat of glass and had a look at the wonders and the beasts of the deep. During that time he discovered a huge fish. The fish needed three days to pass by.' (stamp to the left)
To the right we can see the prototype of the first submarine of the great designer John Philip Holland, the 'Holland No. 1'. In 1878 the tests were completed successfully and he continued to built military submarines.
In 1897 the American shipbuilder Simon Lake built the 'Argonaut I'. The boat had a gasoline-driven engine to be able to drive above and below the water surface and real wheels to drive at the bottom of the sea. The crew got fresh air through long pipes leading up to the surface. The sub had an overall length of 36 feet and, in 1898, the boat conducted a succesful voyage from Norfolk to Sandy Hook.
The first people who entered the world of eternal darkness and returning alive were William Beebe and Otis Barton. They dived into the deep inside a ball of steel called 'Bathysphere', (Greek for 'deep ball'). The ball had a weight of 2250 kg, a diameter of 4.5ft and the sheets were 3.81cm pure steel. The ball hang from a steel cable, combined with rubber tubing for electricity and a telephone cable. In 1930 they dived down to 1416 feet, in 1932 to 2165 ft, in 1934 to 2979 ft. (When we speak about submersibles, the bathysphere simply is a 'must-tell'.)

46. People Under The Sea: Submersibles - 1960 - 2000
Deep Jeep could dive 2,000 feet and hold a 2 crew of two. It was built todo oceanographic research and as a general underwater work submersible.
http://www.onr.navy.mil/focus/blowballast/people/submersibles2.htm
Oceanography Space Sciences Blow the Ballast! CyberMail ... Teachers' Corner
People Under the Sea: Submersibles - 1960 - 2000
Parts of this page utilize JavaScript or another scripting language. If you are seeing this message it means that your browser is not JavaScript enabled. External links on this page will open up a second browser window! You will leave the Office of Naval Research web site by selecting one of these external links. The appearance of external hyperlinks does not constitute endorsement by the United States Department of Defense of the linked web sites, or the information, products or services contained therein. In 1962, the U.S. Navy funded Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution's (WHOI's) newly created Deep Submergence Laboratory to build a small, maneuverable submarine. ALVIN was born in 1964 and took its first dive on June 26. It was named after WHOI researcher Allyn Vine, who had long championed the need for such a research vessel. ALVIN was designed to operate under battery power, allowing it to rise, sink and move without being attached to its mother ship.

47. Sea Technology And Ocean Research
ROVs (HYSUB10 HYSUB5000); AUVs (DOLPHIN, THESEUS, AURORA, ARCS). HarborBranch Oceanographic Institution research vessels and manned submersibles;
http://www.et1.tu-harburg.de/private/gk/seatech.html
Kibelka 's seatech bookmarks
go back to analytical links
On this page:
Ocean Resources:
Institutes Safety/Pollution Data ... CTDs and Sensors
Resources Institutes
  • AWI The Alfred-Wegener-Institute is a German national research center for Polar and Marine research. BALLERINA is the place to go when you seek information on the Baltic Sea Region.

48. UNOLS Issues 2003-2004
UNOLS) is an organization of academic oceanographic institutions working welloperated,state-of-the-art research vessels, submersibles and facilities
http://www.unols.org/info/issues.html
Today's Issues for UNOLS Table of Contents: UNOLS Mission Statement
What the Charter Says

Goals

2003/2004 Top Ten Issues

UNOLS Mission Statement
  • The University-National Oceanographic Laboratory System (UNOLS) is an organization of academic oceanographic institutions working in cooperation with agencies of the U.S. Federal Government to ensure broad access to modern, well-operated, state-of-the-art research vessels, submersibles and facilities required to support a healthy and vigorous research and education program in the ocean sciences.
    UNOLS is an advisory body that provides the mechanisms for coordinated scheduling and access to research vessels and facilities, cooperation and innovation by facility operators and broad community input to operators and federal agencies regarding current and future facility requirements for the ocean sciences.
What the Charter Says
  • 1. INTRODUCTION

49. Appendix B: P.P. Shirshov Institute Of Oceanology; 17 May '93
The institute has ten research ships. Six are specially built for oceanographicscience and two are capable of supporting manned submersibles.
http://www.wtec.org/loyola/subsea/b_may_17.htm
Site: P.P. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology
Academy of Sciences of Russia
23 Krasikowa St.
Moscow 117218
Russia
Telephone: 095-124-5996
Telex: 411968 OKEAN SU
Fax: 095-124-5987 (or 5983)
Date Visited: May 17, 1993 Report Author: D. Walsh
ATTENDEES
WTEC: L. Gentry
B. Mooney
R. Seymour
D. Walsh HOSTS: L. Savostin Director V. Demchenko; Vice Director Dr. A. Gorlov; (meeting coordinator) (and about 12 other senior staff members)
BACKGROUND
The purpose of the meeting was to provide the WTEC team with a general familiarity with the P.P. Shirshov Institute of Oceanology, which is the primary oceanographic research institution in Russia. This took a little over an hour, with the director conducting most of the briefing. A more in-depth visit to Shirshov was made later in the week by a three-person WTEC team. Some of the information that is in the report below was repeated at that time. Dr. Tengiz Borisov briefed the team on the work of KOPRON, the government's Special Committee for Undersea Work, for which he serves as chairman.
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES
P.P. Shirshov Institute is part of the Russian Academy of Sciences. The institute employs 2,000 people at four locations: St. Petersburg, Kaliningrad (Baltic base), Ghelendzhik (Black Sea base), and Moscow (headquarters). The institute formerly had a branch in Vladivostok, and is planning to establish a new branch in Murmansk or Archangelsk. The Moscow headquarters is divided into four branches: biological, marine geology, hydrophysics (which includes acoustics and physical oceanography), and technical (instrumentation, submersibles, etc.).

50. NOAA Ocean Explorer: NOAA Ocean Exploration Offices
shallow and deep-diving submersibles, low-cost Program supports several major researchactivities including monitoring, (2) chemical oceanography, (3) geology
http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/library/noaaoffices.html
Publications
Historical

Documents

NOAA
...
Offices

Each entry provides the name of the NOAA office, Web site address, and description of the program or office. Office of Ocean Exploration
National Marine Sanctuary Program

National Undersea Research Program (NURP)

Vents Program

Office of Ocean Exploration NOAA Office NOAA Research Web Site http://explore.noaa.gov Description This office is responsible for coordinating NOAA's Ocean Exploration Initiative.
National Marine Sanctuary Program NOAA Office NOAA Ocean Service Web Site http://www.sanctuaries.nos.noaa.gov/ Description NOAA's National Marine Sanctuary Program serves as the trustee for the nation's system of 13 marine protected areas. They conserve, protect, and enhance their biodiversity, ecological integrity and cultural legacy. Its goals are appropriate to the unique diversity contained within individuals sites, including restoration, monitoring and maintaining already healthy areas. One sanctuary may protect the breeding ground of humpback whales while another houses the remains of historical shipwrecks. Yet all share in common a growing circle of partners and volunteers who embrace the program's ocean ethicto preserve and protect and respect our nation's marine environment. National Undersea Research Program (NURP) NOAA Office NOAA Research Web Site http://www.oar.noaa.gov/oceans/ocean_nurp.html

51. Exploration Of The Deep
This research ship is operated by the Scripps Institution of oceanography. Itis the sister ship of the R/V Atlantis which carries the submersible Alvin.
http://www.promotega.org/ksu00019/exploration.htm
Exploration of the Deep Five centuries ago, sailors from Europe began exploring and crossing the oceans but the world below the waves was mostly unknown. Until the invention of underwater breathing equipment in the 1800's, only the pearl driver saw what lay more than a few feet below the surface. Through modern science, technology, advances in navigation , and many dedicated scientists, we are meeting the challenges of exploring this deep world. Undersea Explorers Vessels Submersibles Observational Tools ... New Explorations Deep Sea Explorers Alexander Agassiz (1833-1910) Swiss-American Marine Science and Engineer He used his engineering skills to develop new techniques for taking samples and soundings. He believed (incorrectly) that no marine life lived below the shallow depths of the sea. Between 1877 and 1880, he studied plankton levels in the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. Robert Ballard (b.1942) American Oceanographer Robert Ballard is probably best known as the ocean explorer who found the Titanic and the Bismark . He has made over 100 deep-sea expeditions. In 1977, he along with John Corliss discovered

52. Caribbean Marine Research Center, Perry Institute For Marine Science, NOAA/NURP
boats, twoman wet submersible and recompression Major research projects have dealtwith recruitment life histories, fisheries oceanography, the influence of
http://www.cmrc.org/general.htm
CMRC General Information
The Caribbean Marine Research Center (CMRC) was created in 1984 by the Perry Institute for Marine Science, Inc. to address the critical issues associated with escalating environmental degradation as well as other problems related to living marine resources and marine geological processes of the Caribbean, Florida and other tropical and subtropical regions of the world. In 1987, CMRC was designated as one of six National Undersea Research Centers under the auspices of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). As part of NOAA's National Undersea Research Program, CMRC is charged with the responsibility for support of undersea research throughout the entire Caribbean region. Research programs supported by CMRC typically utilize some of the most sophisticated undersea technology available, including manned submersibles, remotely operated vehicles (ROVs), and both air and nitrox scuba diving. Over the past five years, CMRC-supported scientists have averaged nearly 4,000 scuba dives per year. During the same period, 547 submersible dives at depths from 30 to 305 meters conducted with the manned submersibles Nekton Gamma and Clelia. Additionally, a significant amount of support was provided for these operations using shipboard and land-based laboratory facilities. CMRC's main research facility is located at Lee Stocking Island (LSI), a privately owned island in the Exuma Cays, Bahamas. The island, including all facilities, is under long-term lease to CMRC by John H. Perry, Jr., the owner. Since 1984, Mr. Perry and the Perry Institute for Marine Science have invested over $15 million in LSI facilities in support of CMRC's operations. These facilities include 28 buildings (laboratories, aquaculture hatchery and production facility, housing, workshops, power stations, dining hall, RO water plant, dive locker and boat yard), a 3,000-ft (915-meter) airstrip, large dock, eight boats, two-man wet submersible and recompression chamber.

53. MAR 151 Chapter 1
Current and Future Oceanographic research. and then flipped into vertical positionfor research o it is amazingly stable o submersibles also provide access
http://www.marine.usm.edu/mar151/MAR_151_Chap_1.html
MAR 151 Instructors
Dr. Paula Bontempi, Biological Oceanography
Department of Marine Science
Academics Course Offerings MAR 151 Syllabus ... MAR 151 GP Syllabus MAR 151
Introduction to Ocean Science
La Nina Used To Predict Floods
- 1:06 AM ET January 6, 2000, LOS ANGELES (AP) - Rivers in the Northwest and along the East Coast are likely to rise beyond normal levels in the next six months, according to the first predictions based on the current La Nina cooling of the Pacific Ocean.
Course Learning Objectives
- to develop an appreciation for the oceans
- to understand what goes on there and how it affects us
- to understand what oceanographers do and why
- to learn what we do and don't know
Logistics of the Course Philosophy: - learn, don't memorize - appreciate the oceans and how we depend on them - apply knowledge to current events and everyday life The book: - More detail than we need; don't get bogged down

54. DiveWeb | Marine Technology: Links
situ research using divers, ROVs, underwater laboratories and manned submersibles. DCIEM)has world class diving research facilities Oceanographic Organizations.
http://www.diveweb.com/maritech/links.shtml

College Of Oceaneering
LINKS
Organizations

The Puget Sound Section of the Marine Technology Society has their own web page: http://www.phys.washington.edu/~wilkes/mts Research at Heriot Watt University centered on the development of a computer model for the simulation of the sidescan sonar process , which creates synthetic sidescan images. The motivation for the development of this model is the creation of a unique and powerful visualisation tool to improve understanding and interpretation of the sidescan sonar process and the images created by it. The model, based on the computer graphics concept of ray tracing, is complicated by the non-linear underwater environment. ROVs, AUVs, and ROBOTICS
  • The University of Western Australia's TELEROBOT actually lets you control a robotic manipulator over the World Wide Web!
  • The Underwater Robotics Technical Committee of the IEEE Robotics and Automation Society has a page of links and newsletters.
  • MIT Sea Grant's AUV Lab is a leading developer of small, inexpensive, highly functional, unmanned underwater robots.

55. SOEST Facilities
of six National Undersea research Program (NURP the 2000meter capable submersiblesPisces IV The Laboratory for Microbiological oceanography researches marine
http://www.soest.hawaii.edu/soest/about.facilities.html
Search the SOEST web site. principal units:
SOEST Home
About SOEST Academics Research ... Directory
SOEST Facilities, Laboratories
and Research Groups
The core facilities of SOEST are located on the UH Manoa campus, in the city of Honolulu on the island of Oahu . The school has other facilities at several locations around Oahu. SOEST is a multidisciplinary school of the University of Hawaii, where research and education, science and engineering are not separate entities, but are instead the integrated parts of a new whole: out of the many, one. The women and men of SOEST use and develop the most sophisticated and subtle equipment and techniques in their ongoing investigations and research. The multidisciplinary nature of the school facilitates interactions between what are typically separate fields of study, thereby encouraging the flow of ideas and information Facility Locations Ships and Submersibles Specialized
Labs
... Computers Specialized Research Groups: Hawaii Mapping Research Group The Hawaii Mapping Research Group (HMRG) is an organization of scientists and engineers who design, build and operate seafloor mapping systems at the University of Hawaii, and use these tools to study seafloor processes. around the world.

56. CLASSIC DIVING BOOKS - Deep Water Exploration And Oceanography.
Ocean Life, The Promise of Plenty, The New oceanography. of the Department of TropicalResearch at the with high altitude balloons, and deep sea submersibles.
http://classicdivebooks.customer.netspace.net.au/oeclassics-oceanography.html
    Sponsored by:
    OCEANS
    ENTERPRISES
    CLASSIC DIVE BOOKS
    - Oceanography and deep ocean exploration.
    Please note: The books are listed for collectors interest only, and not offered for sale.

    See also Maritime Archaeology
    2,000 FATHOMS DOWN
    Georges Houot and Pierre Willm
    Translated from the French by Michael Bulock.
    Foreword by Jacques-Yves Cousteau. Introduction by Philippe Tailliez.
    Published 1955, Hamish Hamilton Ltd and Rupert Hart-Davis Ltd, Great Britain.
    Hardcover, dustjacket, 256 pages, drawings and mono photographs. The story of Professor Piccard's Bathyscaphe, and its record breaking dive in - well, I can;t find the year. I hate it when authors don't bother to write the year when used in a date for the first time of each chapter. Lazyness. I may read it one day. But the book is of some historic value.(The historic dive was made in 1959). 2000 FATHOMS DOWN Georges Houot and Pierre Willm Publisher: Microsoft Press, 1955 Chronicles the deep dive of French Bathyscape F.N.R.S. 3 off the coast of Africa on February 15. 1954. At that time they set the then deep dive record of 13, 287 feet. Introduction by Jacques-Yves Cousteau. 200,000,000 YEARS BENEATH THE SEA.

57. Japan Marine Science And Technology Center (JAMSTEC) (Under Coordination)
acquired by the manned research submersibles SHINKAI 6500 the following observationand research activities as our to the studies of oceanographic changes and
http://www.goin.nasda.go.jp/GOIN/last_workshop_and_meeting/goin97/agency_impleme
NIED ( SESD ERC NIES NIPR ... ERSDAC
Japan Marine Science and Technology Center (JAMSTEC)
(Under Coordination)
  • Organization Profile
  • The Japan Marine Science and Technology Center (JAMSTEC) was established in October, 1971, as a statutory organization under the Science and Technology Agency.
    The purpose of the establishment is to conduct comprehensive testing of and research into marine science. Currently, JAMSTEC is conducting observations and research, and implementing technological development of deep seas, oceans, and coasts.
    JAMSTEC is promoting the establishment of a database of deep seafloor images, acquired by the manned research submersibles" SHINKAI 6500" and "SHINKAI 2000" and the remotely operated vehicles "DOLPHIN 3K" and "KAIKO". JAMSTEC also promotes the establishment of a database of ocean observation data of the tropical Pacific, the Kuroshio and ocean lidar amongst others.
  • Role in the GOIN Project
  • 2.1 US/Japan Data Exchange during the Project or Preparation
    * Research cooperation agreements were reached with WHOI, SIO and NOAA/PMEL. The agreements cover deep sea research, ocean observation/studies, coastal development/utilization and technological development. With the relation to the agreements, JAMSTEC exchange data of buoys, deep sea research, research vessels and ocean acoustic tomography.
    2.2 Role in the Field of International Global Change Studies

    58. Joint Oceanographic Institutions
    at the University of Hawaii (1988), Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (1988 seafloorphotograph, and dives to the deep seafloor in research submersibles.
    http://www.joiscience.org/About/Employment/new_employees.html
    JOI About JOI Employment
    Marty Kleinrock
    Marty joined JOI in April 2004 as Associate Director for Ocean Drilling Programs. When not at work, Marty enjoys time at home with his wife, two children and four stepchildren. His hobbies include travel, skiing, and hearing and playing music.
    Nancy McGuirk
    Nancy McGuirk came to JOI as the new Travel Associate after more than 20 years as a corporate travel agent. She joins Bridget Chisholm and Maureen Sang in the Travel Department, assisting with the coordination of meeting, special event and travel arrangements.
    Morvika McIntyre
    Morvika McIntyre came to JOI after working at the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty as staff accountant. She will work on accounts payable, payroll submittal, and accounts receivable system functions and will provide accounting and financial reporting support to the Accounting Department.
    Regina Deavers
    Regina Deavers will be joining JOI this summer as a Public Affairs Specialist, focusing on media relations and planning for the Astoria port call. Regina has extensive media and congressional experience, working for organizations including the National Council of Women's Organizations and as a communications/outreach consultant.

    59. Âíåøíèå ññûëêè ïî òåìå ÏÎÄÂÎÄÍÛÅ ÀÏÏÀÐÀÒÛ
    csiro.jpg (4393 bytes), CSIRO Division of oceanography, Austr research SubmersiblesAnd Undersea Technologies Ìíîãî âñåãî î ñåíñîðàõ, AUV,ROV.
    http://aqua.sm.bmstu.ru/links/links.htm
    1. ROV FORUM 2. ROV/AUV FORUM BACK MAIN UNDERWATER VEHICLE DEVELOPERs Dalnewoctochny Sea Technology Problems, RF. OKEANGEOFIZIKA Research Institute, RF. Dalnewoctochny Sea Technology Problems, RF. OKEANGEOFIZIKA Research Institute, RF. Autonomous underwater vehicles (collection groups) COMMERCIAL DAVING magazin, RF. Deep Submergence Laboratory, Woods Hole Oceanographic Instit. Sea Grant AUV Lab., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Aerospace and Robotics Laboratory, Stanford University, Monterey Bay Aquarium and Research Institute, Monterey, US Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, California, Advanced Marine Systems Lab, Florida Atlantic University Marine Systems Engineering Lab, University of New Hampshire Resaerch Instute Special Mashinery. Bauman's Moscow State University International Submarine Engineering (ISE), Vancouver URA Lab., University of Tokyo, Japan KATO Lab., University of Tokai, Japan Institute of Systems and Robotics, Lisbon, Portugal. Subsea Robotics Lab, IFREMER, Toulon, France Southampton Oceanography Centre UK Ocean Systems Laboratory, Heriot-Watt University

    60. US Dept Of State - National Research Council Calls For New U.S. Ocean Exploratio
    frontier, and currently available submersibles whether manned vice president anddirector of research at Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution, Fort
    http://usinfo.state.gov/gi/Archive/2003/Nov/06-810487.html
    Advanced Search/Archive You Are In: USINFO Topics Global Issues Environment
    National Research Council Calls for New U.S. Ocean Exploration Program
    Report encourages international participation
    A new report by a committee of the National Research Council recommends the United States initiate a large-scale ocean exploration program that would increase the pace of discovery of new species, ecosystems, energy sources and pharmaceutical products. The council an arm of the National Academy of Sciences refers to the bottom of the ocean as "the Earth's least explored frontier," and says the new program to explore that frontier should be run by a nonfederal organization and should encourage international participation. The council's committee report, requested by Congress, says recent discoveries of previously unknown species and deep-sea biological and chemical processes have heightened interest in ocean exploration. For example, researchers working off the coast of California revealed how some organisms consume methane seeping through the sea floor, converting it to energy for themselves and leaving hydrogen as a byproduct that could perhaps someday be harnessed for fuel cells. The committee recommends the program include a flagship and a fleet of manned submersibles capable of diving to at least 6,500 meters and unmanned submersibles designed to reach depths of 7,000 meters or more.

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