Mission Overview. On this first cruise of the DEEP Sea Exploration to Advance Research on Coral/Canyon/Cold seep Habitats (DEEP SEARCH) program, scientists used a combination of mapping with water column profiling and sampling to improve knowledge of the geology along the U.S. continental margin, the types of communities found on the seafloor, and the mid-water ...
Access to the video combined with a suite of Internet-based collaboration tools allow scientists on shore to join the operation in real time and allows the general public to follow the expedition online. Image courtesy of the NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research. Download larger version (jpg, 1.2 MB).
For more information and video introductions to Climate Change, Energy, Human Health and Ocean Health, visit the online professional development offerings for Why Do We Explore?, archived here. For More Information. For more information, please contact the NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research Education Team at: [email protected].
In preparation for future work in the deep waters (greater than 200 meters) of Alaska, OER collaborated with NOAA NCCOS to create an online, publicly available spatial bibliography ( metadata here). Its purpose is to help identify scientific data and knowledge gaps, as well as unexplored and underexplored areas, in the Alaska region.
largely unknown ocean. Why Do We Explore? June 21 – July 2, 2010 in partnership with the College of Exploration Join NOAA’s Office of Ocean Exploration and Research for the second in a series of educator professional development opportunities focused around NOAA’s new ship and America’s Ship for Ocean Exploration, the Okeanos Explorer.
Applications are currently being accepted for opportunities between March to September of 2022 and are due February 5 (2-4 week expedition-based opportunities) or February 15 (10-week internship program). Learn more. NOAA Ocean Exploration Cooperative Institute Webinar Series Available for Viewing. Learn more.
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