We use cookies to improve your experience, some are essential for the operation of this site.

Kjetil Vaage, Jim Ryder and Dan Torres recover a mooring acoustic release.

Kjetil Vaage, Jim Ryder and Dan Torres recover a mooring acoustic release.
Kjetil Vaage, Jim Ryder and Dan Torres recover a mooring acoustic release.
Kjetil Vaage, Jim Ryder and Dan Torres recover a mooring acoustic release.
Comments (0)
225375
Cooper, Amy
Kjetil Vaage, Jim Ryder and Dan Torres recover a mooring acoustic release.
Still Image
09/17/2013
graphics/cooper/16.IMG_2337_release_800.jpg
Kjetil Vaage is an MIT-WHOI Joint Program graduate and he now works at the University of Bergen.
Image Of the Day caption:
Kjetil Vaage, of the University of Bergen, helps WHOI mooring technicians Jim Ryder and Dan Torres recover the dual acoustic release component of a mooring line. During a cruise to the Arctic Ocean co-led by Bob Pickart in September 2013, Norweigen and American scientists collected data from moorings such as this one to better understand how the Arctic Ocean circulates as the water temperature rise. Pickart and a team of WHOI scientists, artists and technicians returned to the Arctic in the spring of 2014 to investigate a new phenomenon: a massive phytoplankton bloom under the ice in the Chukchi Sea.
Photo by Amy Cooper
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
http://www.whoi.edu/warmingarctic
Labels
This item includes these files
Collections