Domain: mbari.org
Stories and comments across the archive that link to mbari.org.
Stories · 6
-
ROVs Discover Deep Sea Trash
An anonymous reader writes "Deep beneath the ocean's waves, strange creatures such as rockfish and gorgonian coral thrive in the icy depths. Yet there's something else you'll find if you go searching beneath the sea: trash, and lots of it. Researchers have discovered that our trash is accumulating in the deep sea, particularly in Monterey Canyon off of the coast of California. Scientists knew that trash was affecting shallower depths--about 1,000 feet beneath the water. Yet they were unsure whether the effects extended to the truly deep parts of the ocean that reached up to 13,000 feet. They decided that there was only one way to find out: look for themselves." -
Bizarre Bone-eating Worms Inhabit Whale Falls
Chuck1318 writes "MSNBC reports the discovery of a species of bone-eating worms that live on whale carcasses on the sea floor. The female worm grows "roots" into the whale bones, which contain bacteria that help the worm digest fats from the bones. The tiny males live inside the female, sometimes over a hundred inside a single female. Whale falls provide important oases of nourishment on the sea floor, somewhat analogous to the communities of life around hydrothermal vents." -
EyeToy Creator Discusses Product's Genesis
Thanks to NewsObserver.com for reprinting an L.A. Times article discussing the genesis of Sony's inventive PlayStation 2 EyeToy USB camera hardware/software. According to the piece, the hardware designer behind the peripheral is Richard Marks, a "...Stanford avionics PhD who built cameras that guide one of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute's underwater exploration robots." He comments on low initial expectations: "If there's one thing that's been hammered into my head over and over... it's that peripherals don't sell, and the camera is a peripheral", and explains the early development of the quirky add-on at Sony's Foster City studios, as he "...bought a Web camera and hooked it up to a computer that fed video to a PS2 prototype." Concrete sales figures for the popular, 'mass-market' accessible EyeToy are also revealed: "By the end of 2003, it had sold more than 2 million units in Europe and 400,000 in the United States. Sony estimates it will have shipped 4 million units by March 31, the end of its fiscal year." -
First Permanent Undersea Earthquake Monitor
No_Weak_Heart writes "UC Berkley reports on the successful deployment of the first permanent broadband earthquake monitor on the California seafloor. The instrument, similar to this one , is the first of a planned network that will help Berkeley seismologists and MBARI geologists measure earthquake activity from the ocean side of the San Gregorio fault zone. The seismograph was put in place by the Ventana, a remotely operated vehicle(ROV)." -
First Permanent Undersea Earthquake Monitor
No_Weak_Heart writes "UC Berkley reports on the successful deployment of the first permanent broadband earthquake monitor on the California seafloor. The instrument, similar to this one , is the first of a planned network that will help Berkeley seismologists and MBARI geologists measure earthquake activity from the ocean side of the San Gregorio fault zone. The seismograph was put in place by the Ventana, a remotely operated vehicle(ROV)." -
First Permanent Undersea Earthquake Monitor
No_Weak_Heart writes "UC Berkley reports on the successful deployment of the first permanent broadband earthquake monitor on the California seafloor. The instrument, similar to this one , is the first of a planned network that will help Berkeley seismologists and MBARI geologists measure earthquake activity from the ocean side of the San Gregorio fault zone. The seismograph was put in place by the Ventana, a remotely operated vehicle(ROV)."