Maritime Animal Mapping11/03/2011 |
| CSIRO scientists from Australia have learned animal trekkiing quirks by fitting them with electronic recording and transmitting devices, setting them free, and studying the information they retrieve. King penguins in the Indian Ocean ride ocean currents to eddies rich with fish before making a bee-line back to their chicks. European eels navigate to ocean currents and make deep dives to dodge predators on their 5,000 kilometre migration from Ireland to Bermuda to breed. |
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Read more about: conference mapping Fishing Environment software Supplier: Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) More news from this supplier: New Australian Marine Research Vessel under Construction Tasman Sea Named as Global Warming Hotspot Deep-ocean Sentinels Map Ocean Currents Somali Piirates Sabotage Climate Obs Taking the Heat out of Seawater Debate Melbourne to Host Earthquakes, Tsunamis, Floods Gliders Yield Valuable Marine Life Data (video) Robotic Glider to Map Moreton Bay Impacts Decom North Sea Lunch & Learn Event Osiris Projects Names Custom Build Survey Vessel Donizeti Carneiro to Head Brazil Operations GeoSwath Plus Used for Inland Waterways Rapid Environmental Assessment Exercise Collaboration Medicine Hat Aquatic Rescue Team Completes Hummingbird Training ITLOS Tribunal Grows In International Adjudication BroadSeis 3D Survey in Colombia Drifter Buoys Contribute to Improved Forecasts Dornier Do17 Aircraft Successfully Lifted from English Channel Comments (0): |
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Demo of RIEGL Airborne Bathy Scanner in Camcopter UAV
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It's not an AUV but a UAV. So an unmanned vehicle, but in the air instead of underwater. This movie shows a demonstration of the bathymetric laser scanning capabilities of the RIEGL VQ-820-GU hydrographic airborne sensor in reality. For more information on the technical side, please see the news release on Hydro International.
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