9
November 2006
Ref
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Littlest
ship an
‘ocean science giant’
Australian
climate scientists in Hobart and their international colleagues are
celebrating the feats of a tiny New Zealand research vessel that is
transforming the study of oceans and climate in the Southern Hemisphere.
Measuring
just 28 metres from stem to stern, the Kaharoa, is operated
by the National Institute of Water and the Atmosphere (NIWA).
The
Kaharoa has earned its fame among global climate and
oceanography communities by deploying more robotic ocean profilers –
called Argo floats – than any other research vessel.
Of
the 2,573 floats reporting every 10 days on sub-surface ocean conditions,
the Kaharoa has deployed more than 400 Argo floats in
the past three years in remote parts of the South Pacific and Indian
oceans.
"This
is an especially significant effort that is allowing scientists to get
a handle on ocean conditions in the Australasian region," says Australian
Argo project leader, Dr Susan Wijffels, from the CSIRO Wealth from Oceans
Flagship.
She
said the distribution of heat in our neighbouring oceans strongly affects
Australian rainfall and the Indian-Australian monsoon season.
When fully developed, the Argo network will provide a climate
warning system.
“The
Argo program is primarily reliant on commercial, naval and research
vessels to deploy the robotic instruments, however, in nearby ocean
basins such as the Southern, Indian and Pacific Oceans, shipping traffic
is limited. We have therefore had to rely in great part on the Kaharoa
to deploy New Zealand and US robotic profilers on trans-Pacific and
trans-Indian Ocean voyages, and well south into the Southern Ocean,”
Dr Wijffels says.
The
Kaharoa’s Argo deployment voyages are jointly sponsored
by US Argo and NIWA. US Argo is funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration through the University of Washington and the Scripps
Institution of Oceanography at the University of California-San Diego
(UCSD).
US
coordinator, Dr Dean Roemmich, from Scripps Institution of Oceanography
UCSD, says without
this collaboration, Argo coverage of the little-travelled mid-South
Pacific Ocean could not have been achieved.
Australia
presently has 105 floats, with commitments to deploy another 50 or so
in the next 12 months. In the past seven
weeks, Kaharoa has deployed more than 50 profilers between Mauritius
and Hobart.
The
ship’s Master, Capt Evan Solly, and his crew of four will be the centre
of attention at a welcoming function at CSIRO Marine Laboratories tonight.
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The Master
of the RV Kaharoa, Capt Evan Solly, and Australian Argo project
leader, Dr Susan Wijffels, hold a plaque presented to the ship for
its contribution to 'seeding' the oceans with more than 400 robotic
profiling floats.
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CSIRO Marine
and Atmospheric Research Deputy Chief, John Gunn, Australian Argo
project leader Dr Susan Wijffels and the Master of the National
Institute of Water and Atmosphere research vessel, Kaharoa, Capt
Evan Solly.
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Further
Information: |
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Dr
Susan Wijffels
61 3 52325450 |
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Media
Assistance: |
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Craig
Macaulay
03-62325219 |
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www.csiro.au
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