Wiring the Jersey Coast
In one spot on the continental shelf, scientists aim to understand all that happens, 24 hours a day
- By John P. Wiley, Jr.
- Smithsonian.com, October 01, 1998, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
The LEO-15 instruments include optical sensors to detect florescence in phytoplankton. Oscar Schofield of Rutgers, the "plankton guy," can determine not only the density of phytoplankton but its identity. As early as the year 2000, a LEO-like observatory set up in the Gulf of Maine will begin trying to predict red tides, the sudden bloom in the water of a kind of microscopic organism that can kill marine creatures and injure humans. Despite satellites, we still sometimes learn of red tides only when people call their doctors.
People are also sometimes the detectors for a far more deadly presence in the sea. Among the Navy's methods for finding mines in potential landing-craft lanes in very shallow water is the use of Navy SEALS, who roll out of rubber boats in the dark of night, swim along possible routes and ever so carefully map the explosives. Chris von Alt of Woods Hole is working with the Naval Special Warefare Command to demonstrate that an adapted REMUS vehicle could do some of the swimming now done by humans. Far more exotic plans for REMUS-type vehicles are in the works. Jupiter's moon Europa may have an ocean beneath a layer of ice (Smithsonian, May 1997). An autonomous underwater vehicle is just what NASA will need when the time comes to explore the Europan ocean. Von Alt thinks of the work at Tuckerton in part as "ground-truthing" REMUS; the next step toward Europa will be to test new types of REMUS vehicles in Lake Vostok in Antarctica.
LEO-15 is a first-generation instrument system, easily serviced by divers. Once all the bugs are worked out, the Rutgers group plans more ambitious observatories, at 100 feet, 330 feet and 8,200 feet down. Similar stations are being installed elsewhere: a global Seafloor Observatory is taking shape, especially in the waters off Japan and the West Coast of the United States, where packages of seismographic and oceanographic instruments placed on the bottom are serviced by remotely operated vehicles. One of the latest is a package put on the bottom of Monterey Bay, 3,300 feet down, by an international collaboration led by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in Moss Landing, California.
In the LEO-15 room at the shore station, computer monitors report real-time conditions out at Node B, and others track whichever REMUS is in motion at the moment. In another room, computer wizards turn mountains of data into "movies" of cold-water upwellings along New Jersey beaches. Von Alt prepares to return to Woods Hole; Grassle packs for a trip to Washington, D.C. to testify before a House subcommittee. The 48-foot Arabella, the 30-foot Caleta and the chartered Northstar 4 return to their docks after spending the day lowering and towing instruments to supplement the LEO-15 data. After censusing fish populations in the back bays and the Mullica, five small boats unload their nets. Scientists, graduate students and postdocs, and undergraduate interns joke about the trials and tribulations of another day at sea. Little by little they disperse, walking down a long causeway to where their cars are parked. The station quiets. Five miles out at sea, however, odd-looking scientific instruments continue to pour data down the fiber-optic pipeline. LEO-15 never sleeps.
By John P. Wiley, Jr.
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