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Antarctic Undersea ROV 09

Meet the Team

Teacher - Michele Cross

Michele Cross's picture
Corning East High School
Corning , New York
United States

Originally from upstate New York, Michele Cross is a special education teacher who currently teaches an Introduction to Science class and a variety of English classes at Corning East High School in Corning, New York. When not in the classroom, Mrs. Cross can be found coaching both tennis and soccer for her school district. Likewise, she enjoys cycling, hiking, and gardening in the summer months and snowshoeing and cross-country skiing in the winter. She particularly loves spending summers with her niece and nephew in Colorado. While climbing her first 14,000-foot mountain a couple of summers ago, she learned that her hair could stand on end even in the midst of hail and rain due to the highly charged air around her! Mrs. Cross is thrilled beyond belief to be given this opportunity, and she hopes that it will inspire her students to dream great dreams!

Researcher - Stacy Kim

Stacy Kim's picture
Moss Landing Marine Laboratories
Moss Landing , California
United States

Dr. Stacy Kim is a research professor in Benthic Ecology, or how organisms that live on the seafloor interact to form communities. She has worked with Dr. Adam Marsh in both Antarctic and hydrothermal vent ecosystems, and will be diving on this project to help collect worms, as well as to continue assembling data to examine long term changes in Antarctic ecosystems. When she is not studying human impacts in marine communities and developing technology for underwater research, Stacy enjoys backpacking, climbing, and beach volleyball.

Researcher - Bob Zook

Bob Zook's picture
Moss Landing Marine Labs
Moss Landing , California
United States

Bob Zook is an engineer with Coastal Conservation and Research, Inc. Mr. Zook first worked as a logistics support contractor in Antarctica in 1997, but now works in Antarctic research. Mr. Zook is the chief engineer that designed and developed the remotely operated vehicle (ROV) called SCINI (Submersible Capable of Under Ice Navigation and Imaging). The SCINI ROV will be used in 2010 on the IceAged project. He is also working with the ANDRILL (http://www.andrill.org/) project in Antarctica to develop an ROV that can dive deeper.

Journals

July 24, 2010 Looking Back

Condition 2
The heat and humidity of the summer has me wistfully longing on occasion for a relatively wind free and sunny December Antarctic day. We humans are never really quite happy, are we? “It’s too hot.” It’s too cold.” “It’s too windy.” “I wish there was a breeze.” You know the routine! Regardless, I do...

May 12, 2010 I Finally Have A Cohort!!

I'm Holding A Brain Cavity!
What A Week!

May 6, 2010 Meet Bernie

Meet Bernie the Ungulate

December 22, 2009 Finally Home

Hey everyone...this is just to let you know that I'm home...exhausted but home. And, because I had confirmed reservations, I had no problems with flights on the east coast...except our flight from Philly was delayed because we didn't have a flight crew...and then it took them over 45 minutes to...
Hey everyone...this is just to let you know that I'm home...exhausted but home. And, because I had confirmed reservations, I had no problems with flights on the east coast...except our flight from Philly was delayed because we didn't have a flight crew...and then it took them over 45 minutes to...

December 16, 2009 It's Over...

I happened to look at the date yesterday and realized that we are half way through December and on the cusp of a new year. And, we are officially done here. I was able to snag a hike up Observation Hill and then a tour of Discovery Hut Sunday afternoon.   "To strive, to seek, so find...
I happened to look at the date yesterday and realized that we are half way through December and on the cusp of a new year. And, we are officially done here. I was able to snag a hike up Observation Hill and then a tour of Discovery Hut Sunday afternoon.

Project Information

Development of a Remotely Operated Vehicle for Under Sea Ice Research in Polar Environments
McMurdo Station, Antarctica
29 October 2009
18 December 2009

Where are They?

The team will be working out of McMurdo Station, Antarctica. McMurdo is on Ross Island, a volcanic island (with the southernmost active volcano, Mt. Erebus) south of New Zealand in the Ross Sea. They will be working near Cape Evans to perfect our piloting skills. Then they hope to do science dives at Bay of Sails, an iceberg graveyard under seasonal ice on the west side of McMurdo Sound. This will give them a comparison for last years work under the permanent McMurdo Ice Shelf at Heald Island, and for the iceberg disturbed site at Cape Evans on the east side of the sound. They also have requested permission to work at White Island, the only place where there are natural cracks through the permanent Ross Ice Shelf that is hundreds of meters thick, to describe isolated communities there and compare them to the isolated McMurdo Ice Shelf communities.

What are they Doing?

The research team will continue to explore remote regions of the seafloor around McMurdo Station, Antarctica with a recently developed remotely operated vehicle (ROV) for underwater research. The ROV can be deployed through a small (15 cm) hole in the sea ice, enabling access to regions beyond scuba diving depths (at 40-170 m) and allowing the research team survey very large areas of overlapping seafloor.

The research team will use the ROV to locate historical experimental structures on the sea floor around McMurdo Station and investigate the colonization of these structures by species of sessile invertebrates. The ROV is able to take videos and photographs of these ecological communities, which permits the team to identify size, type, and species of organisms living on the structures. This provides an unprecedented opportunity to explore and document the rates and patterns of ecological succession from one of the most extreme habitats in the world.

The team is also testing protocols for conducting sonar mapping with the new ROV as a first step towards creating high-resolution, bathymetric maps of the entire seafloor around McMurdo Station. Several other scientists have indicated a strong interest in utilizing the ROV in their research, and it's continued development and testing ensures its flexibility to be used for a variety of types of research projects in the future.

Learn more about Project SCINI at the official project website. 

Resources

Title Date About Type
McMurdo Station with Michele Cross and the SCINI ROV Team 8 December 2009

Second live event with Michele Cross and the SCINI ROV team from McMurdo, Antarctica. The event...

Event
McMurdo Station with Michele Cross and the SCINI ROV Team 13 November 2009

This Live from IPY! Event was held with PolarTREC Teacher Michele Cross and the SCINI ROV team...

Event
Determined Corning East teacher headed to Antarctica 17 October 2009

Article about Michele Cross's upcoming PolarTREC Expedition with Stacy Kim and the SCINI ROV...

Article
Chadwicks native heads to Antarctica 17 September 2009

News article from the Pennysaver about PolarTREC teacher, Michele Cross's upcoming trip to...

Article
Useful Links about Antarctica

PolarTREC teacher, Michele Cross compiled this set of useful Antarctica links. Many provide...

Web Link

Journal Map

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