|
|||||||||||||||||||
Visit NOAA's Photo Library and view hundreds of historic and contemporary images and photos of ships and ship work. Visit today's NOAA Fleet at the NOAA Marine and Aviation Operations Web site. |
NOAA has a rich maritime heritage encompassing vessels that have sailed into all oceans of the world collecting data and specimens, mapping seafloor and water column, and observing the interactions between ocean and atmosphere. NOAA ships and the vessels of its ancestor agencies including the Commission of Fish and Fisheries and the Coast Survey have been instrumental in advancing our understanding of the seas and helping protect the living resources of our fisheries. NOAA ancestor agency ships were the first of any nation to conduct systematic oceanographic studies beginning with Gulf Stream studies in 1845, pioneered in helping understand the complexity of deepsea topography, and markedly increased our understanding of ecological relationships within the sea as well as helped expand the knowledge of the diversity of life in the oceans of the world. Notable NOAA ancestor vessels that have advanced our knowledge of the marine environment include the Coast and Geodetic Survey Steamer BLAKE that made classic Gulf Stream studies and was probably the most innovative oceanographic research vessel of the Nineteenth Century, the Fisheries Research Ship ALBATROSS which has been credited with discovering more new marine species than any other research vessel, and the PIONEER which was instrumental in discovering magnetic striping on the seafloor in the 1950’s. But beyond these vessels that have made spectacular contributions in their own right, the NOAA fleet of today and its many historic forerunners have all been part of a grand and continuing effort to chart our shores, understand and protect our fisheries, and comprehend the many complex interrelationships that affect ocean circulation patterns, climate patterns, large marine ecosytems, and even the inter-relationships between atmospheric chemistry and oceanic chemistry. The fleet operated by NOAA today is part of a continuum of ships, crews, and scientists that began with the first charting surveys of the Coast Survey.
|
||||||||||||||||||
|