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Discovery
Life at Sea: An Oceanographer's Adventure

Cassandra Lopez of the University of Miami reports that conducting research at sea can be an adventure, but it is always enjoyable and exciting

Photo of 3 crew members, "tag lines" and equipment on the ship's deck.

The deck crew works to control the "tag lines" that help guide the CTD instrument.
Credit and Larger Version

November 2, 2007

Life at sea is very different from life on land . . . or is it? It may be hard to imagine spending weeks at a time at sea, but for many in our ocean-going team, made up of scientists, technicians and students, living and working at sea is an important part of our careers.

Whether or not we are hardy sea-going adventurers, we often spend at least several weeks--even months--at sea where we can collect and analyze data in the field.

Scientists are eager to do real-time oceanography, studies that involve data collected from experiments at sea. Technicians enjoy the chance to get out of their land-based laboratories and onto the open waters. And students experience the ocean in a much more genuine way than any textbook can provide.

To team members, our research vessel is not only our laboratory at sea, but it is also our home and office, full of all the functions of daily life. This particular cruise is part of a National Science Foundation-funded effort called the Climate Variability and Predictability program, or CLIVAR. Cruises travel along pre-selected routes, or tracks, about once every ten years, collecting climate data from the seas. The data on temperature and salinity will show us how the ocean, and the climate, have changed since 1994.

The CLIVAR cruises usually traverse areas that are not often visited, so there is a sense of adventure, and the vastness of the ocean contributes to the sense of exploration--one feels as if he or she is an early explorer on the high seas.

So what is life like on board our research vessel, the Roger Revelle? One major difference between life on land and life at sea is that the ship is constantly moving.

In rough seas, we walk around like drunken sailors, holding onto the ubiquitous hand rails. Everything must be secured so that it doesn't fly across the room--even people! Chairs are often lashed to the desks, computers are tied down and special mats must be used on tables in the mess hall. As long as something important is not involved, it can be funny to watch someone's book or paper go flying across the room.

Another difference of life at sea is that the typical oceanographer must be ready for work by noon or midnight, depending on which of the two 12-hour watches he or she is assigned. Because the ship is constantly traveling, it might reach a station at any time of the day. Many people need to be awake to deploy the instruments, take samples and process them in the laboratory.

When Jim Swift, the chief scientist, was asked why the crew works 12 hours straight, his answer was simply, "Because they like 12 hours off!"--although the shifts become routine after awhile.

Life at sea, although it has some differences, often mirrors life on land. The community of scientists, crew, students and technicians makes living and working at sea exciting and enjoyable. If there is one trait common to this diverse group, it lies in participating in a shared, intensive endeavor, and enjoying, at least for a month or so, new associates and old friends.

-- Cassandra Lopez, University of Miami  

This Behind the Scenes article was provided to LiveScience in partnership with the National Science Foundation.

Investigators
James Swift

Related Institutions/Organizations
University of California-San Diego Scripps Institution of Oceanography
University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science

Locations
California
Florida

Related Programs
Chemical Oceanography
Physical Oceanography

Related Awards
#0327555 Operation of the CLIVAR & Carbon Hydrographic Data Office at UCSD/SIO
#0223815 Collaborative Research: Global Ocean Repeat Hydrography, Carbon and Tracer Measurements
#0223869 Collaborative Research: Global Ocean Repeat Hydrography, Carbon, and Tracer Measurements
#0223951 Collaborative Research: Global Ocean Repeat Hydrography, Carbon, and Tracer Measurements
#0223434 Collection and Analysis of Radio- and Stable Carbon Isotopes along Selected CLIVAR Repeat Hydrography Lines
#0649505 Collaborative Research: Global Ocean Survey of Dissolved Iron and Aluminum and Aerosol Iron and Aluminum Solubility Supporting the CLIVAR Repeat Hydrography Project (2007-2009).
#0649639 Collaborative Research: Global Ocean Survey of Dissolved Iron and Aluminum and Aerosol Iron and Aluminum Solubility Supporting the CLIVAR Repeat Hydrography Project (2007-2009).
#0649584 Collaborative Research: Global Ocean Survey of Dissolved Iron and Aluminum and Aerosol Iron and Aluminum Solubility Supporting the CLIVAR Repeat Hydrography Project (2007-2009).

Related Websites
LiveScience.com: Behind the Scenes: Life at Sea: An Oceanographer's Adventure: http://www.livescience.com/environment/071102-bts-sea-life.html

Photo of Susan Alford in a lab.
Susan Alford of Scripps Institute of Oceanography adds mercuric chloride to the water samples.
Credit and Larger Version

Photo of Dave Ullman in the laundry room.
Graduate student Dave Ullman does his weekly chores in the laundry room.
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Photo of three people getting their lunch.
Lunchtime on a research cruise is key to the ship's social fabric, bringing everyone together.
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Last Updated:
December 7, 2007
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Last Updated: December 7, 2007