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Buoys being worked on in new buoy lab.

Buoys being worked on in new buoy lab.
Buoys being worked on in new buoy lab.
Buoys being worked on in new buoy lab.
Buoys being worked on in new buoy lab.
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80731
Kleindinst Thomas, N.
Buoys being worked on in new buoy lab.
Still Image
01/04/2008
graphics/Buoy lab /_DCS9626.jpg
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 46, No. 2, Pg. 37:
BUOY SCOUTS–Working in the recently renovated Coastal Research Laboratory at WHOI, engineering assistants Paul Fraser (top), Jim Dunn (center), and Kris Newhall put finishing touches on one of 10 surface buoys that were deployed in shipping lanes off Boston in January 2008 to monitor the location and behavior of endangered North Atlantic righ whales. Equipped with WHOI-developed stretch-hose technology to survive North Atlantic weather and waves, the systems were built in collaboration with the Cornell University Lab of Ornithology and Excellerate Energy to detect right whales during the construction and operation phase of a new liquid natural gas port off Boston.
Image of The Day caption:
Working in the recently renovated Coastal Research Laboratory at WHOI, engineering assistants Paul Fraser (top), Jim Dunn (center), and Kris Newhall put finishing touches on one of 10 surface buoys that were deployed in shipping lanes off Boston in January 2008 to monitor the location and behavior of endangered North Atlantic right whales. Equipped with WHOI-developed stretch-hose technology to survive North Atlantic weather and waves, the systems were built in collaboration with the Cornell University Lab of Ornithology and Excelerate Energy to detect right whales during the construction and operation phase of a new liquid natural gas port off Boston. Marine biologists estimate that only 350 to 400 right whales remain in the North Atlantic.
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 47, No. 2, Pg. 20:
Engineering assistants Paul Fraser (top), Jim Dunn (center), and Kris Newhall assemble surface buoys for auto-detection mooring systems in the Coastal Research Laboratory at WHOI.
Photo by Tom Kleindinst
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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