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Diver Melissa Moulton holding onto a tripod leg in a rip current.

Diver Melissa Moulton holding onto a tripod leg in a rip current.
Diver Melissa Moulton holding onto a tripod leg in a rip current.
Diver Melissa Moulton holding onto a tripod leg in a rip current.
Diver Melissa Moulton holding onto a tripod leg in a rip current.
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257042
Elgar, Steve
Diver Melissa Moulton holding onto a tripod leg in a rip current.
Still Image
06/30/2012
holding_on_to_a_pipe_in_rip_current.JPG
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 51, No. 2, pg. 47:
The surf zone can be a hard place to make measurements, said graduate student Melissa Moulton (above). Youre getting knocked back and forth by waves and sometimes pulled in one direction by strong currents.
Image Of the Day caption:
MIT-WHOI Joint Program graduate student Melissa Moulton and colleagues in the PV Lab at WHOI undertook an unprecedented study to learn how, when, and where potentially dangerous rip currents form on beaches. At a research beach in Duck, N.C., they dredged a channel, which induced the formation of rips. Then they installed arrays of sensors in the surf zone: altimeters to record changing depths and shapes of the seafloor; current meters to measure the speeds and directions of current; and other sensors to measure wave heights and directions. The data will reveal insights into how rips form.
Photo by Steve Elgar
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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