Remotely Operated
Vehicle (ROV) in Lake Superior Research
Spotlight
On: The ROV - all traditional sampling is remote. We
send down a rosette or a ctd or a PONAR, but WE never get to
see … close up and personal … the lake water and
lake floor environment. Until now. We have a Remotely Operated
Vehicle (ROV) on board. This mini-submarine is equipped with
props that permit it to be moved back and forth - up and down,
spotlights to illuminate the bottom and forward and reverse
video cameras. We use the ROV here to examine concentrations
of plankton in the water column and to conduct long term night
observations of life at the bottom. The night ‘stake out'
on the bottom is incredible. Zooplankton floating eerily by
suspended in bottom currents, a darting whitefish, slowly crawling
crayfish, and mysids cruising around the limits of our light
beams with their large eyes reflecting like automobile headlights.
We all agree to nominate the ROV output for a new satellite
TV station - ‘all benthos, all the time'!Return to Cruise
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Dr
Nancy Auer and Mark Gleason: Video Ray ROV underwater robot camera
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Zooplankton leisurely float by at 164 ft
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Robot
view of Lake Superior bottom
Click for Robot
view of Lake Superior bottom
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Zooplankton high density at 88 ft
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Video Ray ROV underwater robot camera
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ROV
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Return to Cruise
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Copyright © 2011
Civil & Environmental Engineering Department at Michigan Tech
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