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Dan Ohnemus poking his head through the bubble lab wall.

Dan Ohnemus poking his head through the bubble lab wall.
Dan Ohnemus poking his head through the bubble lab wall.
Dan Ohnemus poking his head through the bubble lab wall.
Dan Ohnemus poking his head through the bubble lab wall.
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365459
Lam, Phoebe
Dan Ohnemus poking his head through the bubble lab wall.
Still Image
02/14/2011
graphics/Phoebe Lam Ross Sea Palmer GPS/Lam_disk2_organized/bubble_teardown/_DSC0715.JPG
Research included Glider-based adaptive sampling of modified circumpolar deep water thought to be a source of iron to the summer Ross Sea ecosystem. Research vessel was R/V Nathaniel B. Palmer.
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 51, No. 2, pg. 55:
Scientists find moments of fun and games on long research cruises, including decorating their makeshift bubble lab aboard ship.
Image Of the Day caption:
Scientists find ways to have a little fun amid the relentless hard work on long research cruises. Former MIT-WHOI Joint Program graduate student Dan Ohnemus pokes his head out of a decorated makeshift bubble lab built aboard the research vessel Nathaniel B. Palmer in the Ross Sea off Antarctica. For his Ph.D. research, Ohnemus investigated bits of detritus in the ocean that transport important chemicals such as carbon and essential nutrients such as iron. The scientists collected particles from seawater but worked inside a plastic bubble lab, with filtered air pumped in to prevents trace chemicals from contaminating their samples.
Photo by Phoebe Lam
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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