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Looking up through the coring platform.

Looking up through the coring platform.
Looking up through the coring platform.
Looking up through the coring platform.
Looking up through the coring platform.
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294323
Linder, Christopher
Looking up through the coring platform.
Still Image
09/19/2016
graphics/Linder-HD-YLAKE/cl_20160915124827-2.jpg
2018 Wall Calendar caption:
CORE'S-EYE VIEW.
Yellowstone National Park is known for its iconic geysers and hot springs, but fewer people know about the hotbed of hydrothermal activity hidden at the bottom of Yellowstone Lake. WHOI scientist Rob Sohn, who has spent his career studying hydrothermal vents on the seafloor, is using deep-sea technologies to explore the lake bottom, drilling into bottom sediments to extract cores that provide evidence of past geologic activity and climate. This shot was taken looking up through the moon pool, an opening in the drilling platform that allows the coring equipment to be lowered into the water.
Image Of the Day caption:
Yellowstone National Park attracts millions of tourists each year, drawn in part by the park's iconic geysers, hot springs, and fumaroles. But fewer know about the hotbed of hydrothermal activity hidden at the bottom of Yellowstone Lake. WHOI scientist Rob Sohn, who has spent his career studying hydrothermal vents on the seafloor, is using deep-sea technologies to explore the lake bottom. They include drilling into bottom sediments to extract long vertical cores that provide evidence of past geologic activity and climate. This shot was taken looking up through the moon pool, an opening in the drilling platform that allows the coring equipment to be lowered into the water.
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 52, No. 2, pg. 58:
A cores-eye view up through the moon pool.
Photo by Chris Linder
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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