Title: Time present and time past
1Time present and time past Are both present in
time future, And time future contained in time
past. If all time is eternally present All time
is unredeemable. What might have been is an
abstraction Remaining a perpetual
possibility Only in a world of speculation. What
might have been and what HAS been Point to one
end, which is always present. T S
Eliot, Four Quartets 1943
2LOOKING ALL HANDS MEETING iGrid Demo and
Beyond.... /or Streaming HD TV from the Sea /or
Instrument Cluster /or Use of Simulation /or
Telepresence at seafloor /or High End
SeaNet /or Research Channel Production /or
Stream-based Analysis /or AUV Mapping effort
3 Clarke's Third Law "Any sufficiently advanced
technology is indistinguishable from magic.
4(No Transcript)
5(No Transcript)
6(No Transcript)
7(No Transcript)
8(No Transcript)
9(No Transcript)
10(No Transcript)
11Continuous real-time physical, chemical,
biological sensing at all relevant scales.
SCIENTIFIC DIVERSITY COMPLEXITY
GLOBAL CHANGE AND CARBON CYCLING AIR-SEA EXCHANGE
PROCESSES POLLUTION ISSUES NEAR SHORE COASTAL
OCEAN DYNAMICS FORMATION OF METAL/ENERGY
DEPOSITS MAJOR EARTHQUAKE ORIGINS ERUPTING
SUBMARINE VOLCANOES UNDERWATER LANDSLIDES -
TSUNAMIS MARINE BIODIVERSITY ECO-GENOMICS IN THE
OCEAN PHYTO- ZOOPLANKTON PRODUCTIVITY FISH
STOCK HEALTH, BIOMASS, AND MIGRATION PHARMACEUTICA
LS FROM THE SEA MARINE MAMMAL RESEARCH MICROBES
FROM BELOW THE SEAFLOOR
12NEPTUNE-Keck Cruise - Sept, 2005 Components
Sulfide-Microbial Incubator Experiment Plate
Tectonic Microbial Productivity REVEL Sci
Teachers at Sea HDTV - Live from Sea
Autonomous Seafloor Mapping
13(No Transcript)
14(No Transcript)
15Progress
16(No Transcript)
17(No Transcript)
18(No Transcript)
19(No Transcript)
20(No Transcript)
21(No Transcript)
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24(No Transcript)
25(No Transcript)
26(No Transcript)
27(No Transcript)
28(No Transcript)
29(No Transcript)
30(No Transcript)
31(No Transcript)
32(No Transcript)
33(No Transcript)
34(No Transcript)
35(No Transcript)
36(No Transcript)
37(No Transcript)
38(No Transcript)
39(No Transcript)
40(No Transcript)
41(No Transcript)
42(No Transcript)
43(No Transcript)
44(No Transcript)
45(No Transcript)
46(No Transcript)
47(No Transcript)
48(No Transcript)
49(No Transcript)
50(No Transcript)
51(No Transcript)
52Arthur C. Clarke's First Law "When a
distinguished, but elderly, scientist states
that something is possible he is almost certainly
right. When he states that something is
impossible, he is very probably wrong Clarke
defines 'elderly' in physics, mathematics and
astronautics as over thirty in other
disciplines, senile decay is sometimes postponed
to the forties.
53In the end, it all comes back to a dedication to
the ocean and a desire to know about, and
protect, what lies within its waters.
Heather Galindo, UW undergraduate class of
2000
54(No Transcript)
55iGrid Demo /or Instrument Cluster /or Use of
Simulation /or Telepresence at seafloor /or
Research Channel Production Feature
Identification and
56Users will plan and build sensor networks for
simulated cabled ocean observatories.
57(No Transcript)