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    Engineering of R/V Knorr

    By Eric Lindstrom The Research Vessel Knorr is a fantastically capable oceanographic research vessel. She has traveled over 2 million miles and explored all the major oceans in her around 40 years of service. As a visiting oceanography research crew, we have our space on the ship, for which we have free run. We are […]

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    Life in the Sargasso Sea

    By Eric Lindstrom There are not many places in the open ocean that get their own special name as a “sea.” Most seas are what we call marginal seas – offshoots of the major ocean basins. The Sargasso Sea, as a vast track of the western subtropical North Atlantic Ocean is known, has a special […]

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    All About Your Blogger

    By Eric Lindstrom After several weeks of your following my postings from the field, I thought it would be good to tell you a little about myself. Maybe that will help explain the weird wanderings of the blog or the subject matters I choose to write about. Let’s start at the beginning: I grew up […]

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    The Moods of Sea and Sky

    By Eric Lindstrom From the shipboard perspective, all we really see of the sea is the surface. Of course we can see into the water a short way, right close to the ship, but not very far. The horizon is 360 degrees and the great dome of sky seems endless. Being that we are about […]

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    NOAA Contributions to SPURS

    By Eric Lindstrom When we are doing work at sea, it hardly seems fair for NASA to hog the limelight. We are usually offering data from satellites, not ships, moorings, or gliders. There are partner agencies in the U.S. Government who make enormous contributions to the physical oceanography enterprise. In D.C., oceanographers know these agencies […]

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    An Oceanographer And The Water Cycle

    By Eric Lindstrom SPURS Chief Scientist Ray Schmitt has been thinking about the salt in the ocean for a long time. He did his PhD thesis on an unusual form of mixing called “salt fingers,” which we will discuss in a later post. This small scale mixing process led him to consider the origins of […]

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    Earth Indicator: 3.41 million (A new record low for sea ice)

    On September 16, 2012, the extent of sea ice in the Arctic Ocean dropped to 3.41 million square kilometers (1.32 million square miles). The National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) issued a preliminary announcement on September 19 noting that it was likely the minimum extent for the year and the lowest extent observed in […]

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    Plastic Ocean

    By Eric Lindstrom One of the things that we worry about on the ship, as part of our daily routine, is trash. Nothing goes over the side unless it is biodegradable. We have separate trash cans for plastics, foils, and other such material that would pollute the ocean. There are cans with paper liners for […]

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    Tracking Sea Ice at the Top of the Globe

    In the summer of 2012, Arctic sea ice has broken the previous record for minimum extent (set in 2007), fallen below 4 million square kilometers, and, as of September 17, dropped below 3.5 million square kilometers in extent. Multiple studies indicate that the Arctic will eventually lose its sea ice during the summers of the future. […]

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