The first dolphins I've seen so far! |
The rack room is crammed with all kinds of equipment. |
This is during training for the multibeam sonar. |
Red and yellow is shallower, blue is deeper. |
The bottom triangle shows "backscatter" data. The thin vertical line is a plume of gas rising from the seafloor. This data was collected in the Gulf of Mexico. |
In the control van during multibeam sonar training. |
In the control van during multibeam sonar training. |
The device that Nicole is holding is called an expendable bathythermograph, or XBT. |
Radioing the contral van with the serial number of the XBT. |
The XBT records depth and temperature. |
Nicole teaching Juan how to deploy the XBT. |
Getting ready to deploy. |
Success! It is on its way. |
Back in the control van, the data collected by the device. |
Analyzing the data in the control van. |
The blue line is the data just collected. The red lines represent data collected here before - ours falls just slightly out of the previous range (shown in red). |
Showing how to export the data and save it properly. |
A booby soaring near the bow of the ship, scanning the water for fish. |
A flying fish! |
Flying fish, with the marks it has left on the surface of the water. |
Flying fish, with the marks it has left on the surface of the water. |
Tonight we had a beautiful sunset. |
The full moon just starting to peek out from behind some clouds. |
Full moon reflected on the water. |
Skip to the next blog post by Melissa: Seasick
This posting is part of a multi-part series . Melissa Baffa, Vice
President of Program and Volunteer Services for GSCCC, is part of the Corps of
Exploration this year on the adventure of a lifetime. This blog series will
chronicle her dive into the Unknown.
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