Research Expedition Photo Gallery
Our research projects start when we sail on research cruises, often 20 to 60 days at sea, to core sediment from the seafloor. Deeper layers of sediment were deposited earlier than the shallower layers, so coring deep below the seafloor is like looking back through time. Many land and ocean processes affect the type and geochemistry of marine sediment that accumulates on the seafloor. By analyzing different layers in the core, we can determine how these processes have changed over time.
Check out the gallery of photos from research expeditions I’ve sailed on for an idea of what it is like coring marine sediment and doing science at sea.
Line Islands Ridge Paleoceanography
			
			
						10 Photos
			
							R/V Marcus G. Langseth sailed to the Line Islands Ridge to examine glacial-interglacial cycles in the central tropical Pacific.
					East Asian Monsoon
			
			
						11 Photos
			
							The International Ocean Discovery Program's R/V JOIDES Resolution   set out to study the variability of the East Asian Monsoon.
					Last Glacial Maximum Deep Water Chemistry
			
			
						14 Photos
			
							The final cruise of the R/V Knorr collected porewater and sediment from the North Atlantic to examine the chemistry of relict bottom water from the last glacial maximum.
					Western Australia Climate History
			
			
						10 Photos
			
							The R/V SONNE collected sediment archives from the Eastern Indian Ocean to examine climate variability of Western Australia.