Thursday, July 10, 2025

Duluth scientists discover novel ‘Ship Goo‘ aboard Great Lakes research vessel


The Blue Heron, a research vessel operated by the University of Minnesota Duluth's Large Lakes Observatory.
Courtesy of UMD's Large Lakes Observatory


From MPR news by Dan Kraker

Scientists at the University of Minnesota Duluth's Large Lakes Observatory have discovered a new microorganism in an unexpected place—hiding in the oily recesses of a Great Lakes research vessel.

The researchers made the discovery last fall, after crew members aboard the R/V Blue Heron noticed a strange knocking sound coming from the ship’s propeller system while on a research expedition on Lake Erie.

They hauled the ship out of the water at the Great Lakes Shipyard in Cleveland.
That’s when the Large Lakes Observatory’s Marine Superintendent Doug Ricketts saw a black, tar-like goop oozing out of the ship’s rudder shaft. 
 

Scientists at the University of Minnesota Duluth's Large Lakes Observatory discovered novel new microbes hiding in the warm, oxygen-free environment of the rudder shaft housing of the research vessel the Blue Heron.
Courtesy of UMD's Large Lakes Observatory


He had never seen the stuff before, and thought it was odd.
So he filled a red plastic cup full of the substance, and gave it to UMD professor Cody Shiek, a biologist who focuses on microbial ecology.
Shiek decided to sample it.
"I was completely like, we're not going to get anything off of this,” he remembers thinking.
“But surprisingly, we found DNA and it wasn’t too destroyed, nor was the biomass too low."

After sequencing the DNA and comparing it with global databases, the team confirmed they had discovered an entirely new organism, a microbial species that appeared to thrive in the warm, oily, oxygen-free environment within the ship’s rudder shaft.

Shiek and his team temporarily dubbed the substance “ShipGoo001.” 
"And we don't know exactly what ShipGoo001 is good for right now,” said Catherine O'Reilly, director of the Large Lakes Observatory.
“But there's a good chance that we'll learn more about it, and it might turn out to have applications to things that we care about as a society."

For example, some organisms in the goo appear to be methane producers, O’Reilly said, potentially useful for biofuel production.

This isn’t the first time Shiek has discovered a new organism.
Far from it.
On research trips on Lake Superior aboard the Blue Heron, he said it’s common to find new species, especially in the sediment of the lake
“When we go out into the environment, we're constantly finding new organisms, and that's just because things are very under sampled,” Shiek said.

What’s different and exciting about the ship goo is that they were not looking for these organisms.
It was an accidental discovery.
“We weren’t supposed to probably see this,” he said.

Shiek has studied microbes living in extreme environments from Lake Superior, to deep ocean hydrothermal vents and hot springs.

This discovery highlights how much remains unknown, even in familiar, built-up environments like ships.

“I think it tells us we can discover new things everywhere. We don't have to go to Mars necessarily to find brand new things right under our noses,” O’Reilly said.
She added that it’s important to allow scientists to pursue new things without necessarily having a goal in mind.

“This shows us how how important it is to be creative as a scientist, to be open minded, to take advantage of opportunities that come to you and just explore what's right in front of you, because you really don't know what you're going to find.”
 

Researchers at the University of Minnesota Duluth's Large Lakes Observatory discovered new microorganisms dubbed "ShipGoo001" in a black tar-like substance on the rudder shaft of the research vessel the Blue Heron.
Courtesy of UMD's Large Lakes Observatory


A mystery that Shiek is still trying to answer is determining where the organisms originate.
He speculates they may have been dormant in the oil used to grease the rudder, waiting until conditions were right for growth.

While ShipGoo001 is new to science, similar species have been found in tar pits and petroleum wells around the world.

Shiek said the next step in the research is to try to decipher the metabolic processes of the microbes.

“Does it eat oil? Does it breathe in metal, like iron? And so that's where we're at right now.
Thinking about how these organisms are surviving, or maybe even just thriving, in this built environment that we very rarely think about.”

And soon, the substance will receive a new scientific name.
Participants in the Large Lakes Observatory’s Freshwater Discovery Day aboard the Blue Heron on July 30 will have a chance to join Shiek in coming up with an official name for what remains, for now, ShipGoo001.

Links :

Wednesday, July 9, 2025

Sailing the fjords like the Vikings yields unexpected insights


Archaeologist Greer Jarrett at Lund University in Sweden has been sailing in the footsteps of Vikings for three years.
He can now show that the Vikings sailed farther away from Scandinavia, and took routes farther from land, than was previously believed to have been possible.
In his latest study, he has found evidence of a decentralised network of ports, located on islands and peninsulas, which probably played a central role in trade and travel in the Viking era.

From ArsTechnica by Jennifer Ouelette

Greer Jarrett has identified four possible small ports, or "havens," used by Vikings along the Norwegian coast.

If you want to learn more about how and where the Vikings sailed, making the journey through the fjords yourself in replica boats is a practical, hands-on approach to achieving that end.
Greer Jarrett, an archaeologist at Lund University in Sweden, has spent the last three years doing just that, sailing more than 5,000 kilometers along known Viking trade routes in open, spare-rigged clinker boats similar to those used by the Vikings.

Not only has Jarrett learned a great deal about the boats themselves, he also identified four possible havens along the Norwegian coast, part of what may have been a decentralized network that played a crucial role in trade and travel during that period.
And those ports are located farther out to sea than other major ports and hubs known to date, according to a paper he published in the Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory.

It's just the latest intriguing discovery enabled by the growing field of experimental archaeology, whereby researchers seek to reverse-engineer all manner of ancient technologies.
Experimental archaeologists have, for instance, built their own versions of Early Upper Paleolithic adzes, axes, and chisels.
The resulting fractures and wear enabled them to develop new criteria for identifying the likely functions of ancient tools.
Others have tried to cook like the Neanderthals, concluding that flint flakes were surprisingly effective for butchering birds, and that roasting the birds damages the bones to such an extent that it's unlikely they would be preserved in the archaeological record.

Kent State University's Metin Eren has conducted practical experiments to study, for instance, the trajectories of atlatls attached to spears tipped with replica Clovis points, and how their performance compares to javelins used by Neanderthals.
He even fashioned rudimentary blades out of his own frozen feces to test whether they could cut through pig hide, muscle, and tendon—solely to test a famous anthropological legend about an elderly Inuit man in the 1950s who purportedly did the same to kill and skin a dog, using its rib cage as a makeshift sled to venture off into the Arctic.
(It did not work, so myth: busted. But it did snag Eren an Ig Nobel prize.)

Taking a hands-on, experimental archaeological approach to studying the Vikings makes sense in light of the dearth of contemporary written sources.
"We have a few things written by outsiders, but there's very, very few accounts written or delivered by people from Scandinavia during that period," Jarrett told Ars.
"We normally rely on indirect forms of evidence, be that genetics or archaeology or linguistics, which show strong, very frequent connections across maritime areas in the North Atlantic.
But because traveling by boat is kind of an archaeologically invisible act, you don't leave any footprints.
So we have very little information about the voyages between these points."

The sailing voyages made by Greer Jarrett during the research project, as well as the four possible Viking harbors he identified.
 Credit: Greer Jarrett

Garrett and his crew used four or five different replica boats for their test voyages.
Most were built by volunteers, enthusiasts, or students Jarrett had met during his considerable time in the field.
They then sailed along the west coast of the Scandinavian Peninsula, a core area of Viking seafaring.

"These are reconstructions of traditional Norwegian boats from the 1800s and early 1900s," said Jarrett.
"My idea was, because of this really long-term continuity in traditional boat building practices, especially in Norway, it might be possible to use these later boats which have lots of similarities to try and work out the potentials of where people might have gotten out.
It's the idea of suggesting potentials based on practical experience to try and join those dots between the different evidence we have across the Viking world."

That decision has led to some criticism from colleagues because of the enormous gap in time, but Jarrett defends his choice.
"The Viking Age ends in the 11th century, and we're talking about boats from 800 years later," he said.
"But the construction techniques and the way they are rigged and their general performance characteristics are similar enough.
Because this is a project about voyages and not a project about boat building, it seemed like a defensible analogy."

Seeking safe harbor

"On the long-range voyages, we worked in watches of four hours on and four hours off, and that is just about long enough to get some sleep on your off watch, but also just about short enough that you don't get really, really, really cold, which is obviously a risk," said Jarrett.
"It was manageable, but we looked like penguins.
I mean, we're wearing six layers of wool at any time and sleeping all stacked together for warmth.
But other times it's really nice.
The spring and the autumn in Scandinavia, there's much more likelihood of high-pressure cycles, which means that it's clearer and sunnier than in the summer itself."

Nonetheless, there were some rough moments, such as when the mast spar holding up the mainsail snapped, forcing the crew to improvise and lash two oars together to hold the sail so they could continue their journey.
It took several days to repair the boat so it could sail again.
There was no safety boat following along in case the crew got into trouble, and no engine, although they did have a life raft, which the crew has yet to use.

Based on his sailing trials, Jarrett believes that the Vikings had no need for navigational tools like maps, a compass, or a sextant, relying instead on what he calls "mental maps"—or a "maritime cultural mindscape"—based on sailors' memories and experiences passed down orally through generations.
Those maps might also be informed by the myths linked to well-known coastal landmarks, such as skerries, small islets, or reefs.

"People had been moving by boat along the west coast of Scandinavia for a really, really, really long time, probably since the late Neolithic, if not earlier—thousands of years before the Viking age," said Jarrett.
"There are big trading networks in place beforehand, and that is reflected in the names, place names along the west coast.
My primary argument is if you spend 3,000 years traveling up and down a coastline in which you can use the coast at all times for navigation, then it's unnecessary to develop instrumentation.

"Instruments are used when you are in a place out in the open sea that you don't know," Jarrett continued.
"We definitely know they didn't have compasses because those don't arrive from China until the 1200s.
There are these ideas about sunstones and sundials, or little sun compasses, which are entirely possible.
But there's no legitimate proof of either of them archaeologically yet.
I may well be proved wrong if we find them at some point, but I don't think they're necessary for this at all."

 
This type of sailing boat is known as a faering.
It was built at a folk high school in Norway as part of Greer Jarrett's research project. 
 
The boat at sea.
Greer Jarrett

Based on the sailing trials, archaeological and documentary evidence of Viking Age maritime centers, and digital reconstructions of past sea levels.
Jarrett was able to develop a useful set of criteria for evaluating potential havens.
For instance, the site should be reachable in low visibility, with land or sea marks that sailors could use as bearings; large enough to accommodate multiple vessels of at least the size of a fyring(which can house a crew of four to 10 people); provide good protection from sea swell and storm surges; and have access to fresh water, among other criteria.
Four sites scored sufficiently high by those criteria to qualify as possible Viking havens.

The four sites are Smørhamn, located at the confluence of Oldersund and the Frøysjø, where an inn and trading post are known to have existed since at least the late 17th century; the archipelago of Sørøyane between Stad and Ålesund, near where the sea battle of Hjörungavágr was fought circa 986 CE; Bjørnsund, a number of small islands off the southwestern tip of Hustadvika; and the island of Storfosna, which appears on 16th and 17th century charts.

"I'm not saying, 'This is where they went,'" said Jarrett.
"I'm saying that, with these kinds of boats under these conditions, it would be possible to go to these places.
And it's much more difficult—not impossible, but much more difficult—to go to these other places or to sail in these other conditions."

Pining for the fjords

The next step is for Jarrett and other archaeologists to hunt for evidence in support of his hypothesis.
"Most of these sites have never been excavated," said Jarrett.
"There's been a long assumption that these are landing places with the idea that you are dragging your boat ashore.
I'm very opposed to that idea because these are two-and-a-half-ton boats, let alone the cargo.
Unless you have a team of oxen and 20 people at your command, there is no way you're getting them on the beach.
I'm very convinced that these places have jetties and mooring posts likely preserved underwater.
All of that organic material survives much better underwater than it does on land.
So I think that's very possible."

They might also find smaller items suggestive of a thriving harbor community.
"Whenever you go into land, you've got something that's broken, so you need to do repairs," said Jarrett.
"So things like clink nails or piles of balustones or signs of smithing—the typical kind of things you'd use for repairing your ship, I think are possible to find." Jarrett's methodology might also prove useful for studying other seafaring communities. 

Cold winds off the coast of northern Norway. 
Greer Jarrett 
 

A katabatic wind caused this fembøring to capsize off the coast of Kunna in 2023. 
HRS Nord-Norge

The practical experience of sailing the same seas as the Vikings naturally led to some surprising insights.
"You are able to ask very different questions the minute you walk away from your desk and get on a boat," said Jarrett.
"I think it's essential to do that because you think in new ways.
In terms of the results themselves, the boats are extremely seaworthy crafts.
When you get in them for the first time, you don't think that, because they're very, very light.
They feel very flimsy, and they're very low in the water compared to a modern sailing boat.
So you feel really in touch with the wave, which is kind of scary.
But because they're so flexible and because of the way they're rigged, they're actually really stable, even in big waves.

"We kept going out thinking, 'Oh, this is maybe the limit of what this boat can tolerate,' and then it would be fine, and we'd be, 'Okay, let's go a little bit in slightly bigger waves with slightly stronger wind,'" Jarrett continued.
"So I think our comfort zones definitely visibly expanded during that period.
And I had the chance to work with the same crews over three years.
By the end of those three years, we were doing stuff that we would never have been able to do at the beginning."

Another big difference from modern boats, Jarrett discovered, is that one cannot sail a traditional Viking craft alone.
"It has to be a collaborative effort because of how you need a person at the front and the back of the boat basically at all times," he said.
"So developing the crew together and gaining not only skills, but also trust between us meant that we could do things in 2024 that seemed completely insane just a couple of years earlier.
I cannot imagine what that is like if you have an entire lifetime of Viking sailors working together for 30 years.
It must be an incredible way of creating social bonds."

Links :

Tuesday, July 8, 2025

Raster attribute tables and bathymetry: a major upgrade to the paper chart source diagram

Figure 1: Discontinued NOAA nautical chart 11504 of St.
Andrew Sound, Georgia.
Can you spot the source diagram on the chart?

From Medium by Anthony Klemm

Why raster attribute tables depicting geospatially distributed metadata and bathymetry is a match made in hydro-heaven that will turbo-charge data-driven maritime navigation.

Disclaimer: These views represent my own personal thoughts on this subject as a private citizen, and do not represent the views of NOAA or the US Government.

I. Introduction

Although I feel that it’s an overall healthy thing that official NOAA paper nautical charts have rode off into the sunset to make way for newer electronic versions, I sometimes still miss the thoughtful cartographic touches and historical legacy of old paper charts.
One thing I don’t miss is an interesting item of “chart furniture” called the source diagram, which isn’t present in modern electronic files.
Tucked away in a corner, this patchwork of what often looked like hand-drawn polygons was the only way to gauge the quality of the seafloor data beneath their keel.
A pilot navigating a channel had to mentally cross-reference their position with this diagram, trying to decipher if the soundings in one area were from a 1930s lead-line survey or a multibeam sonar survey from 2011.
It was a generalized solution that offered a vague sense of confidence but little in the way of concrete, queryable data.
Plus, it was a bit onerous to use.

Today, we are moving into the world of modern electronic navigation with the S-100 standard.
High-resolution bathymetry, delivered as an S-102 data product, can now be displayed directly on a vessel’s navigation screen.
This gives pilots and mariners an unprecedented view of the seafloor.
But it also raises the old question in a new, more urgent way.

I was recently part of a discussion with some fellow NOAA scientists that were working with harbor pilots testing these new S-102 products.
A consistent point of discussion is the “survey vintage” of any particular area.
One pilot might see a survey launch working in the harbor one week.
The next week, they want to know if that new data is already in the product they are using.

This need for current data is critical for modern navigation.
A pilot’s navigation system can combine the S-102 surface with real-time water level data from S-104 products.
It uses this information, along with the ship’s draft measurements, to calculate a dynamic safety contour and a realistic understanding of their underkeel clearance.
Having the absolute latest bathymetry in this system improves a pilot’s ability to navigate the largest ships safely and efficiently.
It makes sense to want the newest data in order to make the best real-time navigation decisions.

This is where the true value of a Raster Attribute Table, or RAT, becomes clear.
In the S-102 standard, this concept is implemented through a feature attribute table called “QualityOfBathymetryCoverage.”
Instead of a static source diagram, hydrographic offices have the option to build S-102 datasets with a built-in attribute table.
Each group of pixels in the grid is linked to a rich set of metadata attributes describing the source and quality of the bathymetry.

This allows the pilot’s navigation system to do something that was impossible with a paper chart.
It can query the bathymetry directly and dynamically color-code the seafloor based on its age or quality, giving the mariner instant and intuitive feedback.
The RAT transforms the raster from a simple grid of depths into a smart, queryable database… a huge upgrade to the source diagram.

Figure 2: Top: NOAA BlueTopo Bathymetry at St.
Andrew Sound colored by Source Survey ID, an attribute found in the Raster Attribute Table.
Bottom Left: The paper chart’s source diagram
Bottom Right: Hillshaded BlueTopo bathymetry of St.
Andrew Sound rendered in QGIS with ENC land and ATON overlay.

II. What Exactly is a Raster Attribute Table?

At its most basic level, a raster is just a grid of numbers composed of rows and columns of data.
The magic of a Raster Attribute Table (RAT) is that it gives those numbers meaning beyond their value.
Think of a standard raster as a “dumb” grid.
If a pixel has a value of 5, it’s just the number 5.
A raster with a RAT is a “smart” grid.
A pixel value of 5 acts as a key, linking to a row in a table that can tell you anything you want about that pixel’s category.

Figure 3: NOAA BlueTopo bathymetry tile of St.
Andrew Sound colored by Band 2: Contributor layer showing the queried integer value 65840.
This value acts as the primary key to the look-up table (RAT).

Figure 4: The RAT showing the source and quality metadata associated with the contributor layer 65840.
Turns out this area was last surveyed in 1924, from survey H04444.


The concept becomes clearer with the Bathymetric Attributed Grid, or BAG, format.
The BAG format was designed specifically to be more than just a grid of depths.
While not yet universally implemented, the emerging BAG v2.0 standard, published by the Open Navigation Surface Working Group, aims to solve a classic hydrographic problem: how to create a single, cohesive surface from a survey that used multiple sensors and methods.
For example, a survey might include areas of full-coverage multibeam echosounder (MBES), flanked by lanes of single-beam echosounder (SBES), with side-scan sonar (SSS) used to cover the gaps.
The BAG format can hold all these different data types, including any interpolated data if used to fill the space between survey lines, within a single data structure.

The S-102 bathymetry standard uses this same philosophy to create a seamless surface model for modern navigation systems.
This seamless model, which includes interpolated data between actual soundings, is what allows for powerful functions like generating user-customized safety contours on the fly, and selecting soundings at a custom spacing density.

But this raises an important question for those making navigation decisions, whether through route planning or real-time piloting: how does the system know which depths are real versus interpolated? This is where the RAT, in the form of the “QualityofBathymetryCoverage” (QOBC) layer in S102 datasets, becomes valuable.
One of the attributes in the QOBC layer, bathymetryCoverageAchieved, acts as a simple boolean flag.
This flag allows a system to perform user-customized sounding selections, ensuring that only soundings from actual, observed bathymetry are displayed, filtering out any interpolated values.

This structure transforms a simple raster grid into an intelligent data product.
It allows a user or a software system to not just see a depth, but to instantly ask, “Where did this depth value come from, is it real or interpolated, and how good is it?”

III. A Tale of Three Implementations


Linking rich metadata to a raster grid creates many new uses.
Modern data standards and products handle this task in a few different ways.
We can look at three important examples in the hydrographic world: the Bathymetric Attributed Grid (BAG) v2.0, the IHO’s S-102 standard, and NOAA’s BlueTopo product.

1. The BAG v2 Method: Georeferenced Metadata

The BAG format is designed as a self-contained data package.
It uses the HDF5 file structure, which holds multiple datasets like elevation and uncertainty within a single file.
The v2 standard sets rules for how to store metadata for different parts of the grid.
It specifies a “georeferenced metadata layer.” This layer has two parts: a “keys” band and a “values” table.
The keys band is a raster the same shape as the elevation grid.
Each pixel in the keys band contains an integer ID.
This ID links that specific pixel to a row in the separate “values” table.
The values table can hold detailed information, often following established specifications like the NOAA Office of Coast Survey (OCS) metadata profile.

2. The S-102 Method: Quality of Bathymetric Coverage


The IHO’s S-102 standard for bathymetric data uses a very similar system.
It is also based on the HDF5 file structure and was adapted from the BAG format to fit the S-100 hydrographic data model.
The standard defines an optional feature called “QualityofBathymetryCoverage.” This feature is a layer of integer IDs.
Each ID corresponds to a region of the seafloor surveyed under a unique set of conditions.
These IDs link to a feature attribute table that contains specific quality information.
This table includes attributes like the survey date and the bathymetryCoverageAchieved flag, which confirms if a grid cell contains measured or interpolated data.

3. The NOAA BlueTopo Method: The Contributors Layer

NOAA’s BlueTopo dataset provides a real-world example of this principle applied to the common GeoTIFF format.
BlueTopo is delivered as a multi-band GeoTIFF with three main bands: elevation, uncertainty, and a “Contributors” layer.
The Contributors layer is a grid of integer IDs, much like the keys band in a BAG.
Each integer corresponds to a unique survey that contributed data to the final BlueTopo model.
The GeoTIFF file has a standard Raster Attribute Table (RAT) attached to it.
Any user or software can read this table to look up a contributor ID and get the full metadata for that source survey.

This GeoTIFF-plus-RAT method has a key advantage, as it uses a file format that most GIS software can open directly.
A user can immediately view the elevation and uncertainty data, and if their software also supports reading a RAT, they can instantly perform the complex queries and visualizations mentioned earlier.

To access BlueTopo bathymetry geotiffs, you can visit NOAA’s NowCOAST web platform to both visualize the bathymetry (including using the RAT in curated views), and downloading the geotiffs or the standalone RATs directly.

IV. Final Thoughts: A Smarter Seafloor for Smarter Ships

The transition from a small, hand-drawn source diagram on a paper chart to a dynamic, queryable bathymetric surface is quite remarkable.
The core challenge, however, has not changed.
A mariner needs to know the quality and origin of the data they are using to make critical decisions.
The simple, straightforward structure of the Raster Attribute Table is a key idea that makes answering this question possible in the modern digital era.

Whether it is implemented within an S-102 high resolution bathymetry dataset, a BAG file, or a GeoTIFF like in NOAA’s BlueTopo, the function of the RAT is the same.
It transforms a raster from a simple grid of values into an intelligent dataset.
It allows software, and by extension the user, to perform complex queries on the fly.
This capability directly addresses the harbor pilot’s need for confidence and is also a powerful tool for creating labeled datasets to train machine learning models.

This becomes even more critical when we look to the future of shipping with Maritime Autonomous Surface Ships (MASS).
An autonomous vessel’s navigation system cannot interpret a chart with human intuition; it must rely on clear, machine-readable data to make decisions.
The detailed metadata within an S-102 RAT provides exactly this.

A MASS path-planning algorithm could directly query the RAT to perform its own automated risk assessment.
It could be programmed to understand the difference between a high-confidence depth value measured last week and a low-confidence one interpolated from a 1940s survey.
For example, the system could make a calculated decision following this type of train of reasoning: The shortest route has an under-keel clearance of ~2 meters, but it crosses an area with high bathymetric uncertainty.
The alternate route is longer, but it remains entirely within areas surveyed last year with high-resolution sonar.
If risk thresholds are properly chosen, it should choose the safer alternate route.


The RAT, with its rich metadata on data quality, source, and uncertainty, provides the ground truth needed for an autonomous system to navigate safely and efficiently.
The underlying technology is not flashy, but it is fundamental for the future of both human-centered and autonomous marine navigation.



Monday, July 7, 2025

Did you Know There Are “Rogue Holes” In The Ocean In Addition To “Rogue Waves”




Map found on Wista.de 
This image above shows four different types of wave motions in ocean dynamics, showcasing examples of normal and extreme sea states.
 
It comes from this report: Ocean rogue waves and their phase space dynamics in the limit of a linear interference model. (Birkholz, S. et al. Ocean rogue waves and their phase space dynamics in the limit of a linear interference model. Sci. Rep. 6, 35207; doi: 10.1038/srep35207 (2016))


Imagine being on a boat in the middle of the ocean on a seemingly calm day.
There are waves in the water as usual, and there doesn't seem to be anything out of the ordinary. Suddenly, you notice that in the middle of the waves, a vast void more than 80 feet (24 meters) deep is formed, and the water seems to sink as if something is absorbing it from below.
But you're on the high seas.
Underside that voids forming on the water's surface, there's just more water, yet that considerable void creates a current that drags everything around it.
The waves, the foam of the water, and the boat you are on begin to be swept into the void as if they are being sucked into a giant whirlpool that appeared out of nowhere.
The boat begins to sink into that void, and you notice that you are now below sea level while the boat is about to be entirely covered by the waves you used to see from above.
Although it sounds like a science fiction movie, this scenario could happen.
What is happening is nothing more than an "Oceanic Rogue Holes," an anomaly in the ocean that causes the formation of a large hole in the surface of the water.
This oceanographic phenomenon represents a great danger to ships as it could cause even a huge modern ship to capsize.
Could it be that this phenomenon is responsible for many shipwrecks that remain unsolved?
Or is this kind of phenomenon completely impossible?
Rebel Ocean Holes, or oceanic rogue holes, are the opposite of Rebel Ocean Waves, which we discussed in previous videos.
They are oceanic phenomena in which the depth of a hole in the water can reach twice or more the depth of the surrounding voids that occur when a wave falls under its weight.
When a wave occurs in the ocean, it obtains water from its surroundings to grow upwards.
By doing so, the water around the wave descends below sea level, causing what we know as an oceanic vacuum.
This void also occurs when a wave falls under its weight and produces a push of water downwards, causing another new void. 
 
More about them:
  • Normal Seastate: Represents typical ocean wave activity with small, relatively uniform wave heights.
Such conditions are common during calm weather or under normal sea-state conditions.
Waves in this category are predictable and exhibit low energy compared to extreme waves.
  • Rogue Wave: A large and unexpected wave that is much higher than the surrounding waves.
Often referred to as “freak waves,” rogue waves can appear suddenly and are a significant hazard to ships.
These waves occur due to constructive interference, where multiple wave crests align to form a single massive wave.
  • Rogue Hole: This is an inverse phenomenon of a rogue wave, where an unusually deep trough forms in the sea surface.
Such “holes” in the sea can appear abruptly, posing risks to vessels as they may encounter sudden destabilization.
Rogue holes are thought to result from destructive interference or particular wave dynamics.
  • “Three Sisters”:Refers to a sequence of three large waves occurring in close succession.
This phenomenon is particularly dangerous because vessels that survive the first wave might be overwhelmed by the subsequent waves.
The “Three Sisters” phenomenon is often associated with storms or nonlinear interactions in wave trains.

Here’s a simplified summary of the original report:

What Was Studied?

Scientists studied how big, dangerous waves (called “rogue waves”) form in the ocean.
They used a simple model where smaller waves combine in random ways.
This study helps predict when and where these dangerous waves might happen.

Key Findings:
  • How Rogue Waves Form:
When fewer than 10 small waves combine, no rogue waves happen.
If more than 10 waves combine, rogue waves are much more likely.
  • Why This Matters:
Rogue waves can happen more often than we thought, depending on how waves mix and how the wind affects them.
  • How We Can Predict Rogue Waves:
Scientists used a tool (called the Grassberger-Procaccia analysis) to study ocean wave patterns.
This tool helps figure out if the right number of waves is combining to create a rogue wave.
Wind conditions can also affect how rogue waves form, especially if winds come from many directions or are very strong.
  • What’s New?
The study found that understanding how waves mix is key to predicting rogue waves. The shape and number of waves are more important than just their size.
  • How This Helps Us:
Scientists might be able to use this information to create devices that monitor ocean waves in real-time. These devices could warn ships about dangerous rogue waves.
  • Next Steps:
More research is needed to understand how wind patterns and other ocean conditions affect rogue waves. This could make warnings even better.
 
Links :
 

Sunday, July 6, 2025

Relive the Best of E/V Nautilus 2024 Expedition Highlights! | Nautilus Live


In 2024, E/V Nautilus and the Corps of Exploration embarked on one of our widest-ranging seasons ever, spending eight months exploring the Central, Eastern, and Western Pacific, mapping unsurveyed seafloor, and bringing new views of never-before-seen seafloor to the world.
From mapping nearly 150,000 km² of seafloor to conducting 62 ROV dives (totaling over 670 hours on the ocean floor), this was one of our most groundbreaking seasons yet!
Our 10 expeditions and 163 days at sea carried us all to Hawaiʻi, American Samoa, US Pacific Remote Islands, Palau, and Canada with the expedition goals based on community input from scientists and resource managers as well as from local communities and stakeholders in the regions where the expeditions took place.
Thanks to YOU—our amazing community—we reached over 56 million views streaming and on social media worldwide, sharing a love for ocean exploration and science!
This highlight reel captures the breathtaking discoveries, inspiring people, and cutting-edge technologies that powered this unforgettable year.
Thanks to our many partners who have made the 2024 E/V Nautilus expeditions possible with their support including NOAA Ocean Exploration via the Ocean Exploration Cooperative Institute, Ocean Networks Canada, the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, the NOAA Office of Marine and Aviation Operations Uncrewed Systems Operations Center, the Office of Naval Research, the National Marine Sanctuary of American Samoa, and Palau International Coral Reef Center.
Our season would also not be possible without the over 200 professional mariners, scientists, engineers, tech specialists, educators, and students to join the vessel this season.