IPB

( Log In ) Log In is for TREC Teachers & Researchers only

 
Reply to this topicStart new topic
> June 1, 2006 - Professional Cup Decorator, The Cup Experiment
Samantha_Dassler_Barlow
post Jun 2 2006, 09:17 PM
Post #1


Advanced Member
***

Group: TREC Team
Posts: 99
Joined: 12-April 06
Member No.: 23



Date: Thursday, June 1, 2006

GPS Coordinates
Latitude: 62° 32.8’ N
Longitude: 174° 37.2’ W

IPB Image
Can you tell the difference between the shallow water on the continental shelf and the deep water of the basin? The lighter blue means shallower water and the darker blue means deeper water.

IPB Image
We are almost finished reoccupying stations south of St. Lawrence Island and now we are working on a transect out towards deeper water on the edge of the shelf before we head back to Dutch Harbor.

Maybe you have noticed the lighter blue on the maps in the northern part of the Bering Sea up where our stations are and the darker blue down towards the Aleutian Islands in the southern part of the Bering Sea. The lighter blue is part of the continental shelf where it is shallow, around 30 to 80 meters. The darker blue, southern part of the Bering Sea is deep, around 3000 meters.

After finishing some sampling at a few of the stations south of St. Lawrence Island that we have already been to, we will begin heading out towards the edge of the continental shelf. On the map, that is where you see the blue get much darker and the slope goes from a gradual downhill slant to a steep drop off. We will begin sampling on the edge of that shelf in water that is around 2000 meters deep. What do you think the water profile will be like when the scientists send down the CTD? Will the amount of salt increase or decrease with depth? What about the amount of chlorophyll in the water?

We are also doing an experiment with polystyrene cups (Styrofoam). Well, it is more like making our own souvenirs than an experiment. A lot of people have decorated a small polystyrene cup with permanent marker. We will put them in a bag attached to the CTD and the bag will go down, under the water with the CTD.

What do you think will happen, if anything at all, to the cups as the depth of the water increases? Make a hypothesis – an educated guess as to what you think the cup will look like when it is brought back up to the surface and why you think so.

Will it expand?
Will it shrink?
Will it get implode?
Will it explode?
Will it stay the same?
Will it do something else?

Many of you might already know what will happen to the cup from experience. So, my challenge to you then, is to see if you can explain why that outcome happens.

Here are some pictures of the cup that I will be sending down with the CTD tomorrow.

IPB Image
6/1/06 – Mrs. Barlow poses with her cup before it is sent down to 2000 meters with the CTD.

IPB Image
6/1/06 – I have decorated my cup with a permanent marker. There is something novel about being able to say that your name has been down, that far, under the ocean.

IPB Image
6/1/06 – Yet another view of my beautiful cup, with as much information as I could possibly write on it.

IPB Image
6/1/06 – I wanted you to see all the decorations of my cup before I put it in the water. I am afraid it will never look the same again…
User is offlineProfile CardPM
Go to the top of the page
+Quote Post

Reply to this topicStart new topic
2 User(s) are reading this topic (2 Guests and 0 Anonymous Users)
0 Members:

 



- NSF Acknowledgment & Disclaimer Time is now: 10th November 2024 - 01:06 PM