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Research boat headed toward a blue hole in the Bahamas.

Research boat headed toward a blue hole in the Bahamas.
Research boat headed toward a blue hole in the Bahamas.
Research boat headed toward a blue hole in the Bahamas.
Research boat headed toward a blue hole in the Bahamas.
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432286
van Hengstum, Pete
Research boat headed toward a blue hole in the Bahamas.
Still Image
04/25/2016
DSCF3808.jpg
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 53, No. 2, pg. 8:
Long metal tubes protrude from the bow and stern of a research boat headed toward a blue hole off Long Island in the Bahamas. Scientists lower the long pipes to the seafloor to extract cores of sediments that settled to the bottom of the blue hole.
Below: The cores contain telltale layers of material swept in by passing hurricanes, revealing a record of when past hurricanes
occurred.
Image Of the Day caption:
Long metal tubes protrude from the bow and stern of a research boat headed toward a blue hole off Long Island in the Bahamas. Scientists lower the tubes to the seafloor to extract cores of sediments that settled to the bottom of the blue hole. Blue holes are naturally occurring deep holes in the seafloor. They are ideal basins to catch coarse-grained particles swept in by passing hurricanes. Researchers in the WHOI Coastal Systems Group are examining the sediments to reveal past patterns of hurricane and ocean temperatures, which can help us predict and prepare for hurricane activity in the future.
Caption from Oceanus online:
Long metal tubes protrude from the bow and stern of a research boat headed toward a blue hole off Long Island in the Bahamas. Scientists lower the long pipes to the seafloor to extract cores of sediments that settled to the bottom of the blue hole. The sediments contain forensic clues that the scientists use to reveal past patterns of hurricane and ocean temperatures, which can help us predict and prepare for hurricane activity in the future.
Photo by Pete van Hengstum
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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