• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Deep sea probe to track Australia climate change

Wed Jan 9, 2008 11:17pm EST
SYDNEY, Jan 10 (Reuters) - Australian and U.S. scientists will send an unmanned submersible 2.5 kms (1.5 miles) deep into the ocean off Australia next week to track climate change by studying coral at unprecedented depths.

The joint project will film live and fossilised deep-sea coral off the coast of Australia's southern island state of Tasmania, studying coral growth rings which like tree rings can store centuries of information about the environment.

"Like tree rings, growth rings in corals indicate age. They also reflect changes over centuries and millennia in ocean chemistry and the ocean environment," Ron Thresher from the Australian government's Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) said on Thursday.

"Deep ocean corals are a litmus test of the deep ocean when it comes to identifying how temperature and salinity have changed over decades and centuries," Thresher, who will set sail on Friday, said in a statement announcing the project.

"We hope to track two influential elements on the global climate system -- the formation of water masses at the Antarctic coast and the circulation of the Southern Ocean," he said.

The submersible Autonomous Benthic Explorer, on loan from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in the United States, will be launched from an Australian marine research ship during the 23-day voyage. The submersible can reach depths of 4 kms (2.5 miles) and can stay underwater for seven hours.

CSIRO marine scientist Alan Williams said a dive to 2.5 kms will allow scientists to view biodiversity at depths never seen before in Australian waters.

"We have a good sense of the marine ecology around seamounts (submerged volcanoes) down to about 1,500m, but to be able to see and build an understanding of life beyond is a tremendously exciting prospect," said Williams. (Reporting by Michael Perry, editing by Sanjeev Miglani)





More from Reuters

Photo

Democrats reach deal on health bill

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senate Democratic healthcare negotiators said they agreed on Tuesday to replace a government-run insurance option with a scaled-back non-profit plan and would seek cost estimates on the deal.

A pedestrian walks in lower Manhattan in New York, April 16, 2007.  REUTERS/Eric Thayer
Analysis:

The boomer meltdown

The number of U.S. workers in their prime savings years peaks in 2010, affecting a key ratio that has impacted equities for 40 years. If history repeats itself, stocks are set for a funk.  Full Article 

  Traders work on the main floor of the BM&F Bovespa stock exchange market in Sao Paulo October 10, 2008.REUTERS/Paulo Whitaker

Betting on emerging markets

There's still an upside in large-cap U.S. stocks, but BlackRock's Bob Doll says emerging markets have two things the developed world does not.  Full Article