- Visions18
- Visions17
- Visions16
- Visions15
- Visions14
- Construction
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Visions13
- Leg 4 Team Returns to Seattle
- Arrived in Victoria BC
- Operations Complete
- Success During the OOI-NSF VISI ...
- Days Flying By
- First Complete Installation at ...
- Back to Axial Volcano
- Installing Caissons and Conduct ...
- Beginning Leg 4
- End of VISIONS '13 Leg 3
- Poetry Night on Leg 3
- Cable Route Planning
- Working at the Vents Again
- Earthquake Data!
- Overcoming Challenges
- Diving at Axial
- Transition: Leg 2 to Leg 3
- Wiring a Volcano
- Laying Cable at the Summit of A ...
- First Live Data From the Seaflo ...
- Installing the First Extension ...
- Our First Look at Primary Node ...
- Laying the first Extension Cabl ...
- Weathering Delays
- Site Verifications at Hydrate R ...
- Successful Testing of Primary N ...
- Starting Work at Axial Volcano
- Thompson Sets Sail for VISIONS ...
October 2013
August 2013
July 2013
June 2013
- Visions12
- Visions11
- Enlighten
The VISIONS'13 expedition is nearing its completion. The R/V Thompson is on its way to Victoria to offload the ROV ROPOS, before transiting to the University of Washington, School of Oceanography dock. The RSN team completed all that we set out to do and more.The above picture says it all: we have nothing else left on the fantail to install.
We are incredibly grateful to the crew of the R/V Thompson and to the Canadian ROV ROPOS team. Our success would not have happened without them, and we greatly appreciate their incredible professionalism, their sustained hard work over the duration of this cruise, and their efforts to get the job done in the safest and most efficient way possible. We are also grateful for their continued dedication to the entrainment and education of the students in ship and ROV operations as part of the School of Oceanography education program.
This summer's efforts went a long way toward ensuring the successful completion of the cabled component of the National Science Foundation's Ocean Observatories Initiative next summer.