Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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Whales inhabiting the waters off of New York and New Jersey can now be heard in real-time thanks to an acoustic monitoring buoy created by a consortium of marine scientists. The device allows the group to track, study and protect several species of endangered baleen whales.
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It's not easy studying sharks. With most observations being made from the surface we know almost nothing of the predator's behavior below the waves. The REMUS SharkCam AUV and the team at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute are starting to pierce the blue veil.
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Scientists at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution have developed a new technology called ITAG, which is designed to place instruments on squid, jellyfish to provide detailed information about the animals and their habitat.
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An international team of scientists has found that retreating sea ice between the Atlantic and Arctic Oceans is linked to significantly weakened air-sea heat exchange in the region since 1979. This, it warns, could result in a cooler climate in western Europe.
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Antarctic scientists have made big gains in our knowledge of Antarctic sea ice thanks to an autonomous underwater vehicle that produced high-resolution 3D maps beneath previously-inaccessible ice floes. The new data suggests the ice may be thicker and more deformed than previously thought.
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One of the scientific community's flagship unmanned research submarines, used for deep-sea exploration, has been declared lost as of 2 pm (New Zealand Standard Time), May 10. It was in use by researchers aboard the scientific research vessel, the Thomas G.
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The National Science Foundation (NSF) announced on Friday that the Alvin deep-sea submersible is returning to service. The DC3 of the oceanographic world was launched fifty years ago in 1964 and is ready to begin its second half-century of service after a three-year overhaul.
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DSV Alvin has completed a major US$41 million redesign and refit and set sail on Saturday aboard its mothership R/V Atlantis for certification testing off the coast of Oregon and California.
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Researchers have employed two autonomous marine robots called gliders to act as a real time whale-detection system off the coast of Maine.
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ScienceWoods Hole Oceanographic Institution is getting ready to market a wireless optical undersea communications system, and an autonomous undersea microscope.
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A new broadband acoustic undersea imaging system is set to revolutionize oceanography.
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Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution has developed an undersea optical communications system, that could do away with the tethers currently used for submersibles.
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