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Helicopter towing Jaguar to open water.
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Helicopter towing Jaguar to open water.
Helicopter towing Jaguar to open water.
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75359
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Linder, Christopher
Title
Helicopter towing Jaguar to open water.
Helicopter towing Jaguar to open water.
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Date
09/11/2007
File name
graphics/agave2/cl_20070730_agave07_jaguar_040.jpg
Notes
Singh hooked Jaguar in the pool. Kemp and company attached the lifesaving ring to it to ensure that it would not sink again, and slung up the robot for yet another helicopter ride. Stenvall flew Jaguar back to Oden and dipped it into a pool of open water on the ship's port side. Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 46, No. 2, Pg. 26: Two days later, Puma’s robotic sibling, Jaguar, surfaced somewhere under a seemingly endless blanket of white. Oden’s helicopter flew low, dangling a receiver just above the ice to listen for a sound signal from Jaguar. After more than an hour, a signal finally came. Pilot Sven Stenvall dropped a red-painted piece of wood on the ice to mark Jaguar’s location underneath. Oden broke ice and up popped Jaguar. Mattias Peterson, Oden’s captain, expertly and gingerly maneuvered the icebreaker toward it, trying to avoid accidentally running over it, pushing damaging ice floes into it, or stirring up the ice too much and losing the vehicle again. WHOI engineer John Kemp and Ulf Hedman, expedition leader from the Swedish Polar Research Secretariat, were lowered in a metal basket to the ice to recover Jaguar. Each man was armed: Hedman with a shotgun in case of polar bear; Kemp with a pole and a rope and safety harness so he could jump safely from one ice floe to another. But by the time they reached the ice, Jaguar had suddenly disappeared again, and they could not relocate it. More fretful hours passed, but at last, a crack opened in a large ice floe that had pinned Jaguar. Stenvall landed on the floe, and copilot Geir Akse hooked a line to Jaguar. Oceanographers often say their underwater vehicles “fly” through the ocean above the seafloor. Jaguar flew through the air (shown here.) The helicopter delivered it to a pool of open water near Oden, where it was brought aboard as ice floes rushed in against the hull. During the expedition, Puma and Jaguar were launched eight times. To Reves-Sohn’s and Singh’s relief and delight, the number of recoveries equaled the number of deployments.
Singh hooked Jaguar in the pool. Kemp and company attached the lifesaving ring to it to ensure that it would not sink again, and slung up the robot for yet another helicopter ride. Stenvall flew Jaguar back to Oden and dipped it into a pool of open water on the ship's port side.
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 46, No. 2, Pg. 26:
Two days later, Puma’s robotic sibling, Jaguar, surfaced somewhere under a seemingly endless blanket of white. Oden’s helicopter flew low, dangling a receiver just above the ice to listen for a sound signal from Jaguar. After more than an hour, a signal finally came. Pilot Sven Stenvall dropped a red-painted piece of wood on the ice to mark Jaguar’s location underneath. Oden broke ice and up popped Jaguar. Mattias Peterson, Oden’s captain, expertly and gingerly maneuvered the icebreaker toward it, trying to avoid accidentally running over it, pushing damaging ice floes into it, or stirring up the ice too much and losing the vehicle again. WHOI engineer John Kemp and Ulf Hedman, expedition leader from the Swedish Polar Research Secretariat, were lowered in a metal basket to the ice to recover Jaguar. Each man was armed: Hedman with a shotgun in case of polar bear; Kemp with a pole and a rope and safety harness so he could jump safely from one ice floe to another. But by the time they reached the ice, Jaguar had suddenly disappeared again, and they could not relocate it. More fretful hours passed, but at last, a crack opened in a large ice floe that had pinned Jaguar. Stenvall landed on the floe, and copilot Geir Akse hooked a line to Jaguar. Oceanographers often say their underwater vehicles “fly” through the ocean above the seafloor. Jaguar flew through the air (shown here.) The helicopter delivered it to a pool of open water near Oden, where it was brought aboard as ice floes rushed in against the hull. During the expedition, Puma and Jaguar were launched eight times. To Reves-Sohn’s and Singh’s relief and delight, the number of recoveries equaled the number of deployments.
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© Shane Gross/Greenpeace
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Adinah Barnett
Adobe Farmhouse Photography
Alamy Stock Photo
Courtesy of National Aeronautics and Space Administration
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Illustration by Eric S. Taylor, WHOI Creative
Illustration by Jack Cook
Illustration by Jayne Doucette
Illustration by Natalie Renier, WHOI Creative
Marine Imaging Technologies, LLC © Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Photo by Amy Apprill
Photo by Craig LaPlante
Photo by Daniel Hentz
Photo by Danielle Fino
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Photo by Jayne Doucette
Photo by Katherine Spencer Joyce
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Photo by Marley L. Parker
Photo by Matthew Barton
Photo by ML Parker
Photo by Rachel Mann
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Photo courtesy of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Archives
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Photo by Chris Linder
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Croy Carlin
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Image courtesy of NOAA Ocean Exploration, Deep Connections 2019.
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Unless otherwise noted (copyrighted material for example), information presented on this World Wide Web site is considered publi
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graphics/agave2/cl_20070730_agave07_jaguar_040.jpg
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jdoucette
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kjoyce: lonny presentation hsingh: use in paper kjoyce: adsf rhurst: exhibit jcanavan: Oceanus magazine, Vol. 46, No. 2, Pg. 26
kjoyce: lonny presentation
hsingh: use in paper
kjoyce: adsf
rhurst: exhibit
jcanavan: Oceanus magazine, Vol. 46, No. 2, Pg. 26
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