Written by: Carlyn Scott, Science Communication Assistant at 新澳门六合彩内幕信息CMS
The College of Marine Science鈥檚 (OCL) recently returned from a five-day mooring cruise in the Gulf of Mexico aboard the , replacing weather buoys and collecting water samples used for ride tide monitoring.
The OCL is headed by physical oceanographer Dr. Robert Weisberg, and the lab studies ocean circulation and its ecological impacts in the Gulf via direct observations and models. Their direct observation techniques include moored buoys, which collect meteorological and circulation data, and it was the maintenance of these buoys that prompted the recent cruise into the Gulf.
The cruise was even able to recover an Ocean Technology Group ocean glider that was running low on battery power and return it to campus.
Chief scientist Jay Law was happy with the cruise and attributes its success to hard work by the Weatherbird II crew and the science party, particularly the students on board. 鈥淚 really enjoyed seeing the students rise to the occasion this week,鈥 said Law. 鈥淔rom our own graduate students leading sampling operations to young undergraduate volunteers getting their first taste of being at sea, it was fun watching these young scientists respond to the challenge.鈥