most popular:
100s of Dead Penguins



most popular: She Can Burn Her Water


most popular:
Affordable Electric Car


th comments
RemyC said: "I read somewhere today that the German government changed its mind, and will indeed shut down all their nukes by 2020, if not indeed sooner...." [read]

RemyC said: "That's sweet revenge, considering GM/Chevron conspired to pin Panasonic down to the ground by preventing them from continuing to make Nickel Metal ..." [read]

RemyC said: "hey bikesaddle, you really can't tell when someone's kidding, can you? have you seen alter eco? this week they launched an organic jean collection,..." [read]

Chat sohbet said: "Thank you guys Good post..." [read]

ARP said: "I would not ban them as I think it a bit overboard. I would charge for them or tax them. It's a win-win for most cities: they get more money and fe..." [read]

UK Deploying Armada of Robot Submarines and Sensors to Monitor Gulf Stream

by Jeremy Elton Jacquot, Los Angeles on 01.21.08
Science & Technology

ROV
Image courtesy of UNC

It's not often that you hear scientists cite the latest Hollywood fare as inspiration for their work. Yet Meric Srokosz of the Southampton Oceanographic Centre, explaining the purpose of the $31 million Rapid Watch system he is heading up, does just that, citing the plotline of "The Day After Tomorrow" - specifically the collapse of the Gulf Stream - as a potential occurrence that warrants further investigation. The Observer's Robin McKie lays out the relevant details:

"An armada of robot submarines and marine sensors are to be deployed across the Atlantic, from Florida to the Canary Islands, to provide early warning that the Gulf Stream might be failing, an event that would trigger cataclysmic freezing in Britain for decades."

Now while Srokosz doesn't actually believe that the Gulf Stream could collapse within the period of a few days - as suggested in the film - he doesn't put it beyond the pale that it could happen in "about 10 years." As McKie goes on to write, Rapid Watch will rely on underwater monitoring techniques to "check whether cold water pouring south from melting Arctic ice sheets is diverting the current's warm waters away from Britain."

The results of an initial study Srokosz and his colleagues carried out in 2004 suggested that the Gulf Stream "fluctuates in a highly unpredictable fashion." As such, he believes past measurements may not provide an ideal predictive indicator for what could happen in the near future; beginning later this year, Rapid Watch will monitor the Gulf Stream until 2014 with an armada of ocean-floor sensors - which will assess current flow, temperature and other variables - and robot gliders - which will monitor the current itself. This system shares many of the same features as the Hudson River environmental monitoring network we previously reported on.

The consequences of a freeze in the Gulf Stream could be drastic, as McKie outlines: "Without the Gulf Stream, the UK would be as cold as Canada in winter. Ports could freeze over and snowstorms and blizzards would paralyse the country."

Via ::Guardian Unlimited: Ocean floor sensors will warn of failing Gulf Stream (news website)

See also: ::Hudson River Environmental Monitoring Goes High-Tech, ::Gulf Stream's Tidal Energy Could Provide Up to a Third of Florida's Power

Comments (2)

I'm glad someone is doing this - this is an area of climate science we are completely unsure about, and the more information we collect and monitor, the better!

Contrary to popular belief, oceans - and not forests - are the largest carbon sink in the world. The problem is we know significantly less about how the oceans are reacting to increasing carbon dioxide absorption than forests. So, this is a step in the right direction!

-GreenOx
www.greenox.blogspot.com

jump to top GreenOx [TypeKey Profile Page] says:

Yes and surely will get us one step closer to the Global Surveillance Society, if one wants to name it for what it is becoming.

It is not hard to imagine the amount of other data these camera/sensor equipped devices are capable of recording.

Knowing our ruling class' scientific behaviour over the last 100 years, I bet anything that Gulf Stream Monitoring is only one thing these devices are set up to do.

What an awful thought, camera's wherever you go, next thing you know, your baby has to swallow a "small harmless device" to monitor any evil thought entering it's little mind.

Yikes. Not to be trusted.

jump to top RideTheFuture says:

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

th ads
th top picks
th ads