Posted on 05/10/2010 7:32:32 AM PDT by OneVike
Considering we live on a planet who's surface is 71% water, it only makes sense that we should understand as much about the oceans as we do dry land. So throughout the years there has been countless expeditions who's main purpose was to collect information about the vast bodies of water throughout the world. The men and women who have dedicated their lives to the specific purpose of unlocking the secrets of the vast waterworld that resides within our planet, have benefited from various vessels designed specifically to meet that challenge.
In 1950, French explorer Jacques-Yves Cousteau acquired the minesweeper Calypso, and transformed it into an oceanographic research vessel. Then in 1966 he was invited to produce a documentary on about ocean life for television. So for the next 10 years "The Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau" would become America's eye into the world of sharks, whales, dolphins, sunken treasure, and coral reefs. Many of today's Oceanographers credit Jacques Cousteau for their passion of Ocean exploration. With the awareness of Cousteau's show, there would soon be many more research vessels designed by many engineers for the purpose of understanding the Ocean, above and below the surface.
The American public's awareness of what was beneath the ocean waves would be aroused by the discovery of the Titanic on September 1, 1985 by a submersible named the Argo. The Argo was used by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) Research Vessel Knorr to find the sunken, unsinkable ocean liner. Then in 1997 Director James Cameron introduced to the world to another submersible vessel named Alvin, when he released his mega hit movie "Titanic". As early as WWI, submersibles have been used by the navy for the specific purpose of exploring the Ocean floors. Then on January 23, 1960, the navy's Trieste set an all-time depth record by diving to the bottom of the Challenger Deep in the Marianas Trench in the Pacific Ocean. However, all these deep sea research vehicles need ships to get them to their destination of exploration.
Like the research vessel Knorr
(pictured to the right) which is owned by the
U.S. Navy, these ships are all equipped with the newest technology that allows for anywhere from 10 to 38 scientists to be on board at the same time performing various research projects in the laboratories. Like the Knorr, these ships can stay at sea for upwards of 2 months at a time before they need to come to port for supplies. There is the R/V Atlantis which has a crew of 23 while allowing for 24 scientists, and the R/V Kilo Moana which is operated by the University of Hawaii, School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology, in Manoa. The R/V Kilo Moana is 186 feet long and displaces 2,542 tons. It holds 17 crewmen and 31 scientists and can travel at 15 knots. Except for some strange looking equipment on deck, you would not be able to distinguish one of these research vessels from any merchant ship. That is all but one.
That one research vessel is so distinguishable from the other research vessels that it doesn't even look like a ship. Nope, fact is this research vessel looks more like a Louisville slugger while being towed out to sea, and a giant water buoy when it is fully deployed. They call this vessel the FLIP, which is short for Floating Instrument Platform. Made in 1962, Flip is one of the worlds best kept secrets of the Oceanographic industry, but this secret has not been on purpose however. No it's low profile in the awareness of the public's eye is probably due to the type of work it's scientists perform.
These experiments are not the kind of stories the MSM would dare bump more important stories like, the effects on old people if Republicans are successful in blocking the increase of taxes, or how many innocent thugs were murdered by guns thanks to the evil and unneeded 2nd Amendment. No, the MSM would never waist valuable air time to show you a short video clip of FLIP and what experiments they do. Besides, the kind of experiments that are conducted aboard FLIP are "Ocean Surface Wave Optical Roughness: Innovative Polarization Measurement", or testing the relationship between pipe length and seawater entrainment or exit velocity towards development of a salinity gradient power source. So as you can imagine, not many.....
(Excerpt) Read more at ChicoER Gate ...
Check out this one of a kind research vessel that floats in such a way that it can stay out on the scientists on board can stay out on the ocean even during storms that create up to 80 foot waves without fear of ever sinking. The video is at the bottom of the fairly lengthy article I wrote, so here is the link to two videos, FLIP, How Does It Float? Or you can download this short 3 min. mpg I made and watch it later on your own pc, FLIP.mpg
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prisoner6
This ship has been around a long time!
I got to see it back when I was a kid in the 70s when it was docked at Pearl Harbor.
prisoner6
Not much of a secret. I remember this from the 60s.
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ARRRGH
Agony of Apostrophe’s!
I WANT that .gif!
Its reelly that eazy, ain’t it? I find its better to use an apostrophy’ whenever’ possible’ or’ convenient’ or, comma’s and, apostrophies, combined,’ if ‘you, get’ my drift.,”:’.?<
(sorry, couldn’t help myself :>)
I'll take two It's-Its, please.
I remember reading about this years ago, perhaps when it was first proposed or something. thanx for letting me see it in action. cool!
OneVike ~ The same way Guam does!
It will sink if it gets too full of seamen?
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