CG Arctic Continental Shelf Research

August 11, 2009

A Coast Guard Cutter Healy boatcrew along with a scientist from Scripps Institution of Oceanography recovered a sonobuoy, Aug. 8, 2009, while on a scientific research mission in the Arctic Ocean.

The 1,100-pound sonobuoy spent nearly a year on the ocean floor at a depth of almost 1,000 feet measuring ambient noise at its location. 

To locate and recover the device the Healy was steered to the position the sonobouy was deployed a year ago.  A signal was sent from the cutter to the buoy that commanded it to release the ballast weights that held it to the bottom of ocean.

After a 10-minute assent, the device reached the surface and was located by the boatcrew.  The crew towed the buoy to the stern of the Healy where it was hoisted onto the ship using a large a-frame crane.

While deployed, the sonobouy recorded sounds made by whales, seals and other marine mammals.  It also monitored sounds created by movements of ice sheets above and the sea floor below.  This information will be used to help scientists understand the natural sound level in the ocean.

The Healy’s current mission is of part of the U.S. Extended Continental Shelf Task Force’s efforts to determine the outer limits of the U.S. continental shelf.

The Canadian Coast Guard Ship Louis S. St.-Laurent is scheduled to join the Healy Aug. 10, 2009, to aid in collecting data that will used by both countries.

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