
The class is comprised of lectures on the physics of various things important to oceanography such ocean currents, upwelling events, internal waves, etc. But we are also conducting a class experiment linking physical aspects of the ocean (temperature, density waves, current velocities) to the biological (also known as the interesting stuff) in the intertidal. Check it out, we'll be using these barnacle settlement plates (the grey squares) to catch little baby
All the ecologists are groaning because that's already been done before. However, the neat part is that we'll be using some cool moorings deployed offshore of the barnacles to measure the physical stuff. You would think that this has frequently been done before but early marine ecology often didn't measure this other stuff. Why? Well first because measuring stuff in the marine realm is a pain in the ass in the first place (you gotta get up early to hit the low tides or strap a scuba tank to your back) and also because measuring all those physical things is usually expensive. It's getting cheaper to do that and it's obviously important so now we're doing it.
So we've also deployed these moorings in the ocean as well. Some might notice that the anchor at the top of the picture is made from battleship chain. Yes! That's awesome! For the mariners in the group, the chafing gear (that protects the line) is made from firehose. Those little black cylinders are thermistors (fancy oceanographer talk for thermometers) that can sample the temperature once every half second or some such ridiculous rate. The red thing at the bottom is a subsurface buoy which keeps the "thermistor chain" vertical (note the use of fancy language, I'm becoming a better scientist already!).
After deploying the mooring we conducted some additional measurements. One pressing question we wanted to answer was "What is the velocity of an object leaving a cylinder with thrust generated by the mixing of hydrocarbons ignited by a peizoelectric ignition? Specifically, what is the velocity if the object is a potato?"
Charles here demonstrates the use of this sophisticated sampling instrument.
I'll go ahead and leave you with a nice bowl of ginger garlic string beans made by my classmate Mya. Derishous.
Here's a lil teaser pic of a post to come, can anybody (who wasn't there) guess where it was taken?
1 comment:
mwuahaha, I know what the next post is gonna be! yay!
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