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Kate Morkeski and Mallory Ringham (red) working on CHANOS II during tests.

Kate Morkeski and Mallory Ringham (red) working on CHANOS II during tests.
Kate Morkeski and Mallory Ringham (red) working on CHANOS II during tests.
Kate Morkeski and Mallory Ringham (red) working on CHANOS II during tests.
Kate Morkeski and Mallory Ringham (red) working on CHANOS II during tests.
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Doucette, Jayne H.
Kate Morkeski and Mallory Ringham (red) working on CHANOS II during tests.
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10/18/2018
_DSC8910.jpg
Image Of the Day caption:
WHOI marine chemist Aleck Wang and his research team are developing a new instrument to measure two key factors in the global carbon cycle that helps regulate Earths climate. The new Channelized Optical System (CHANOS II) is designed to take very precise measurements of dissolved inorganic carbon and the amount (partial pressure) of carbon dioxide in ocean water. This fall, research assistant Kate Morkeski (left) and MIT-WHOI Joint Program graduate student Mallory Ringham ran CHANOS II through its first tests outside the labat Eel Pond in Woods Hole and in the test well on the WHOI dock.
Photo by Jayne Doucette
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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