It is said that we know l...">

Description: neptuneIt is said that we know less about the Earth's oceans than we do about the entire surface of the moon, but advances in broadband communications may finally change all that. Several major research intiatives are underway to install cabled observatories offshore the US coastline. NEPTUNE, one of the first and most ambitious programs, intends to create a 2,000 mile-long cabled observatory that wraps around the Juan de Fuca and Gorda oceanic plates off the northwest US coast. Last year, NSF awarded $3.9 million to the University of Washington, University of California, San Diego, and partner institutions to create the Laboratory for the Ocean Observatory Knowledge Integration Grid, or LOOKING project, which will design the cyberinfrastructure that is central to NEPTUNE and other observatories, such as the Monterey Accelerated Research System (MARS) run by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI). Coordination between the various research programs at the national level will be managed and operated by the Ocean Research Interactive Observatory Networks (ORION) program. When installed these observatories will provide for the first time the essential infrastructure needed for long-term, continuous, in situ observations in the deep sea, and will enable scientists to study the oceans from the comfort of their laptops.
Posted: 03/30/05 (Edited 03/31/05)
Rating: 0 0 vote(s). Views: 191
Views in the last 30 days: 8.
Rate this Link:
E-mail Link to Someone:
Send from to the email

Comments

[Post Reply]


Post a Comment
Your Name:
Your post:
Anti-Spam Image:
Type the letters and numbers shown on the left into the box on the right. (This is to prevent automated submissions.)
security image
Members currently reading these link details:

Contact Element List

Site Map

simple hit counter