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McLane sediment trap is recovered to the deck of Oceanus.

McLane sediment trap is recovered to the deck of Oceanus.
McLane sediment trap is recovered to the deck of Oceanus.
McLane sediment trap is recovered to the deck of Oceanus.
McLane sediment trap is recovered to the deck of Oceanus.
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191024
Roosen, Ellen
McLane sediment trap is recovered to the deck of Oceanus.
Still Image
10/04/2011
graphics/Oceanus_476_E_Roosen/_GCT2760.JPG
On or about 1 October 2011, your vessel being ready for sea and weather permitting, you will depart Woods Hole, MA on Voyage #476. Upon completion of the science activities, the vessel shall call at the port of St. George's, Bermuda on or about 13 October 2011.
The scientific objectives of this cruise will be to collect settling and suspended particles at three locations on the northwest Atlantic margin to determine carbon transport from the shelf/slope to the deep basin, coupled with physical oceanographic data from moorings at Line W.
Image of The Day caption:
WHOI engineer Scott Worrilow guides a yellow sediment trap onto R/V Oceanus along with (clockwise from bottom left) WHOI engineer Brian Hogue, seaman Leo Fitz, and bosun Clindor Cacho, on a 2011 cruise to the Line W moorings, which monitor the flow of Atlantic currents that can influence climate, including the Gulf Stream. The sediment traps attached to these moorings collected particles drifting down through the water, for studies by WHOI research specialist Steven Manganini (far right in photo).
Photo by Ellen Roosen
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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