National Centre Covers Marine Science From Coast to Ocean03/02/2010 |
| The Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) creates a national research organisation that will work in partnership with the UK marine research community to deliver integrated marine science and technology from the coast to the deep ocean. The National Oceanography Centre (NOC) will be formed by bringing together the NERC Proudman Oceanographic Laboratory (POL) in Liverpool and NERC-managed activity at the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton (NOCS) into a single institution. |
|
NOC will work in close partnership with the wider marine science community to create the integrated research capability needed to tackle the big environmental issues facing the world. Research priorities will include the oceans' role in climate change, sea level change and the future of the Arctic Ocean.
A major element of the new approach will see the designation of a set of Partners of NOC - comprising research institutes and key university groups - working collaboratively to support world-class strategic research, technology development and training the scientists of the future. Together with a wider group of Associates, these organisations will form the NOC Association, sharing in the delivery of a community developed strategy for marine science.
NOC will have a key role in providing national capability to meet the needs of the whole UK marine research community including Royal Research Ships, deep submersibles and advanced ocean technologies. It will also be home to the global mean sea level data archive, the UK's sea level monitoring system for flood warning and climate change, the national archive of subsea sediment cores and the British Oceanographic Data Centre.
The approach benefits from greater co-ordination in research developed by the marine community over the past decade, with strong investment from the NERC. For example, the close relationship between the University of Southampton and NERC has led to NOCS being recognised as one of the world's leading oceanographic institutions. NERC investment and the development of close links with the University of Liverpool have helped create a world-class research centre at the POL. In future, the University of Southampton and the University of Liverpool will be hosting partners of the National Oceanography Centre.
Working with other NERC-funded marine centres in Plymouth and Scotland, the Oceans 2025 programme is delivering a major stream of strategic research and the marine community is now highly successful at winning consortium grant funding. NERC with the marine research community has also been working closely with government departments and the Devolved Administrations, most recently through the Marine Science Co-ordination Committee, in the development of its soon to be published strategy which calls for more effective approaches to prioritisation, co-ordination and delivery of marine science. Building on this excellence, the vision for NOC, in collaboration with its partners, is that by 2015 it will be recognised as the world's leading institution for integrated marine science and technology, able to influence the European and global strategic research agendas.
Chief Executive of the Natural Environment Research Council, Professor Alan Thorpe, said, "The need to grow our understanding of the crucial role the oceans play in the whole Earth system has never been greater. Their contribution to climate variability and change, their huge biodiversity and their capacity to offer solutions to ever more pressing human concerns, requires the integrated approach to ocean sciences that the National Oceanography Centre will enable.
"The excellent interdisciplinary research we will be able to deliver will consolidate the UK's position as a world-leader in marine science and increase the impact of our research in addressing issues of energy and food security, the discovery of new materials and medicines, and the need to manage marine space more effectively and protect vulnerable coastal communities."
Read more about: security Environment Training Supplier: National Oceanography Centre Southampton More news from this supplier: Exotic Creatures Found at Deep-sea Vent in Indian Ocean Under-ice Lake Survey Methane Escape Research Sumatra Tsunami: Sediment Trenches Implicated Graduate Science Students Head to Mediterranean Sea Monitoring Deep-Sea Industry Post-trawling Seabed Recovery NERC Commissions New Research Vessel 'Black Smokers' Three Miles Deep Long-range AUV Passes First Trials Offshore Survey Frame Agreement ROV Survey of the Costa Concordia Grounding Site (video) 44 PMGS Transponders for Earthquake and Tsunami Research Underwater Vision to Fugro Subsea Services Award for Brazilian Hydrographic Paper Demonstrating a 'Deeper Understanding' First Real-Time Seafloor Earthquake Observatory Theme of Hydrography Day 2012: International Cooperation Finistère and Mediterranean Bathymetric Lidar Surveys Precise Positioning For BP Vessels Comments (0): |
| News |
| News > National Centre Covers Marine Science From Coast to Ocean |
|
Interactive |
Hydrographic Survey of Riverbed Erosion |
Members of the US Geological Survey were filmed while out on the Missouri River at Williston, North Dakota, USA, performing a hydrographic survey to monitor the state of riverbed erosion. They were using a multibeam echo sounder which transmits sound energy and analyses the return signal (echo) that has bounced off the riverbed or other objects. Multibeam sonars emit sound waves from directly beneath a ship's hull to produce fan-shaped coverage of the riverbed.
|
| Last 5 items: |
| Hydrographic Survey of Riverbed Erosion |
| Introduction to GEBCO |
| MCA on Surveying the British Coast |
| Surveying in the Port of London |
| Venessa O'Connell on Hydrography |
