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Networking the World
Co-participants:
§:
The Minerals, Metals,
and Matenals Society
Society ofExploration
Geophysicists
S8AGUAmerican Geophysical
Union
The Women's
Aquatic Network
The Coasts, Oceans, Ports
and Rivers Institute
The American
Meteorological Society
The Oceanography
Society
UB/TIB Hannover 89
A Thin Fiber Cable Laying System for
Mobile Deep Seafloor Observation 667
Katsuyoshi Kawaguchi, Japan Marine Science and
Technology Center, Deep Sea Research Department,Kanagawa, Japan; Takato Ntshida and Shinichi
Obana, Ocean Cable & Communications Corp., Tokyo,
Japan
Volume Two
Session 15
Ropes and Tension MembersSession Chair John F. Flory
Tension Technology International, Inc.,
Morristown, NJ
.672
Test Method for Determining the
Assured Residual Life Span (ARELIS)of Polyester Mooring RopesRigo Bosman, Acordis Industrial Fibers, The
Netherlands
Defining, Measuring and Calculating the
Change-in-Length Properties of
Synthetic Fiber Rope 679
John F. Flory, Tension Technology International, Inc.,Morristown, NJ
Creep as a Design Tool for HMPE
Ropes in Long Term Marine and
Offshore Applications „„685
Paul Smeets, Martien Jacobs, and Marcel Mertens,DSM High Performance Fibers, Heerlen, TheNetherlands
Estimation of Sediment PropertiesUsing Frequency Domain Identification
and Marine Acoustics 697
S. Vandenplas, A.B. Temsamani, and L. Van Biesen,
Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium
Bottom Parameter Extraction
from Long Range Reverberation
Measurements 707
John R. Preston, Applied Research Laboratory,The Pennsylvania State University, State College, PA
Acoustic Propagation AnomaliesCaused by Thin Geoacoustic Layers 715
Jens M. Hovem, Norwegian University of Science and
Technology, Trondheim, Norway and Forsvarets
Forskningsinstitutt, Horten, Norway;Connie-Elise Solberg and Dag Tollefsen, Forsvarets
Forskningsinstitutt, Horten, Norway
The Fine Scale Geo-Acoustic Inversion of
The Shallow Water Sub-Bottom
Using Chirp Signals 723
W. Seong and C. Park, Department of Naval
Architecture and Ocean Engineering, Seoul National
University, Seoul, Korea
A Geoacoustic Inversion Methodfor Range-Dependent Environments
Using a Towed Array 731
Martin Siderius, Science Applications International
Corporation, La Jolla, CA; Peter Nielsen, SACLANTUndersea Research Centre, La Spezia, Italy;Peter Gerstoft, Marine Physical Laboratory, Universityof California San Diego, La Jolla, CA
Session 16
Geoacoustic InversionSession Chair Alex Tolstoy
A. Tolstoy Sciences,
Annandale, VA
Blind Marine Seismic Deconvolutionby a SEM/MPM Method: Applicationto the ESSR4 Campaign 691B. Nsiri, 0. Rosec, and J.M. Boucher, ENSTBretagne, Brest Cedex, France;E. Menut and B. Marsset, IFREMER, PlouzaneCedex, France
Geoacoustic inversion
Studies 737
D.P. Knobles, R.A. Koch, and M.S. Haire, AppliedResearch Laboratories, The University of Texas at
Austin, Austin, TX
Session 17
Applications of Signal ProcessingSession Chair Alex Tolstoy
A. Tolstoy Sciences,
Annandale, VA
Geoacoustic Inversion Using MFP 745
A. Tolstoy, A. Tolstoy Sciences, Annandale VA
xxxu
ft!
Direction of Arrival Estimation UsingSuper-Resolution Algorithm 749
Yi Xu, Wei Feng Feng, Jun Yan Hao, and H. K.
Hwang, Electrical and Computer Engineering,California State Polytechnic University-Pomona,Pomona, CA
Time-Frequency Analysis of Frequency-CodedSignals 756
Oleg A. Rogozovskyi, Signal Theory Group, Ruhr
University Bochum, Universitatstr., Bochum, Germany;LJubisa Stankoviae and Igor Djuroviae,Elektrotehnieki fakultet, University of Montenegro,
Podgorica, Montenegro, Yu
Adaptive Radar Clutter
Suppression 762
Yi Xu, Wei Feng Feng, Jun Yan Hao, and H. K.
Hwang, Electrical and Computer Engineering,California State Polytechnic University-Pomona,Pomona, CA
Model-Based Detection in a Shallow Water Ocean
Environment 769
James V. Candy, University of California, Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA
Broadband MFP: Coherent vs.
Incoherent 776
S.M. Jesus and C. Soares, SiPLAB-FCT,Universidade do Algarve, Campus de Gambelas, Faro,
Portugal
Gibbs Sampling Optimization in
Underwater Sound Problems 782
Zoi-Heleni Michalopoulou, Department of
Mathematical Sciences, New Jersey Institute of
Technology, Newark, NJ
Model-Based Tracking for
Autonomous Arrays 786
Michael B. Porter, Paul Hursky, and Christopher 0.
Tiemann, Science Applications International
Corporation, La Jolla, CA; Mark Stevenson, SPAWAR
Systems Center, San Diego, CA
A Method for Robust Time-Reversal
Focusing in a Fluctuating Ocean 793
Seongil Kim, W.A. Kuperman, W.S. Hodgkiss, H.C.
Song, and G.F. Edelmann, Scripps Institution of
Oceanography, La Jolla, CA; T. Akal, SACLANT
Undersea Research Centre, La Spezia, Italy;R.P. Millane, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN
D. Di lorio, University of Georgia, Athens, GA
Session 18
NOAA's Undersea Research ProgramSession Chair Barbara Moore
Director,National Undersea Research Program, NOAA,
Silver Spring, MD
Applications of Human Occupied Vehicles
at Hydrocarbon Seeps and Vents in the
Gulf of Mexico 799
Andrew N. Shepard, University of North Carolina at
Wilmington, National Undersea Research Center,
Wilmington, NC
New Research Directions and Enhanced
Potential at the Hawaii Undersea
Research Laboratory 807
Alexander Malahoff, John C. Wiltshire, Keith A.W.
Crook, Christopher D. Kelley, and John R. Smith,
Jr., Hawaii Undersea Research Laboratory, NOAA's
National Undersea Research Center for Hawaii and the
Western Pacific, University of Hawaii at Manoa,
Honolulu, HI
Fisheries and Fisheries Habitat
Investigations Using Undersea
Technology 812
Jennifer R. Reynolds, Raymond C. Highsmith,Brenda Konar, C. Geoffrey Wheat, and David
Doudna, West Coast & Polar Regions Undersea
Research Center (NURP), University of Alaska
Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK
Predictions of Underwater Weather 821
Michael P. De Luca, J. Frederick Grassle, and
Janice M. McDonnell, Institute of Marine and Coastal
Sciences, Rutgers - The State University of New
Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ
xxxm
The Evolution and Development of the
Small ROV as an Essential ExperimentalTool in Limnological and Coastal
Marine Research 826
J.V. Klump and R.W. Paddock, University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Great Lakes Wisconsin Aquatic
Technology & Environmental Research (WATER)
Institute, Milwaukee Wl; I.G. Babb and P. J. Auster,National Undersea Research Center, University of
Connecticut at Avery Point, Groton, CT
Session 19
Deepwater Fisheries
Session Chair Dr. Chris KelleyHURL/SOEST
New Data on Pacific Flatnose,Antimora Microlepis (Moridae) from
the Northwestern Pacific Ocean 833
A.M. Orlov and A.A. Abramov, Russian Federal
Research Institute of Fisheries & Oceanography
(VNIRO), Moscow, Russia
Feeding Habits of Some Deep-BenthicSkates (Rajidae) in the Western BeringSea 842
A.M. Orlov, Russian Federal Research Institute of
Fisheries & Oceanography (VNIRO), Moscow, Russia
Some Biological Features of RoughscaleSole Clidoderma Asperrimum (Temminck et
Schlegel, 1846) in the Pacific Waters off the
Northern Kuril Islands and Southeastern
Kamchatka 856
A.M. Tokranov, Kamchatka Institute of Ecology and
Use of Natural Resources, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky,Russia; A.M. Orlov, Russian Federal Research Institute
of Fisheries and Oceanography, Moscow, Russia.
Rare Events of Cyclopia and Melanism
Among Deep-Water Snailfishes (Liparidae,
Scorpaeniformes) 864
A.M. Orlov, Russian Federal Research Institute of
Fisheries & Oceanography (VNIRO), Moscow, Russia
Larval Vertical-Migration Strategyof Japanese Eel
,
Kimiaki Kudo, Global Ocean Development Inc.,
Yokosuka, Japan
Mapping Submersible Observations
of Deepwater Snappers on 3-D
Multibeam Images of a Bottomfish
Habitat in Hawaii 876
Christopher D. Kelley, Hawaii Undersea Research
Laboratory, NOAA's National Undersea Research
Center for Hawaii and the Western Pacific, Universityof Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, HI
Session 20
Technical Diving in Support of Science
Session Co-Chair Richard Pyle
Bishop Museum
Honolulu, HI
Session Co-Chair Forrest YoungDirector,
Dynasty Marine Associates Inc.,FL
Power and Oxygen Sources for a
Diver Propulsion Vehicle 880
G.T. Reader, University of Windsor, Windsor, ON,
Canada; I.J. Potter, Alberta Research Council,
Edmonton, AB, Canada; E. Clavelle, University of
Calgary, AB, Canada
Session 21
DivingSession Chair, Dr. Bill Phoel
Phoel Associates, Inc.
Toms River, NJ
Diving - A Look Ahead to 2050 888
Don Chandler, Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical
Society, Kensington, MD
Acoustical Characteristics of Glass Wool
Materials in Hyperbaric Helium-Air UsingTransfer Function Method 892
T. Nakaiand Y. Kawanishi, Faculty of Engineering,Shizuoka University, Hamamatsu, Japan;H. Suzuki, Faculty of Science and Technology, Tohoku
Bunka Gakuen University, Sendai, Japan
.870
xxxiv
The U.S. Navy Dive Computer 900
D.G. Southerland, Captain, Medical Corps, USN NavyExperimental Diving Unit, Panama City, FL;F.K. Butler, Captain, Medical Corps, USN Naval
Special Warfare Command Detachment Pensacola,
Pensacola, FL
Warm Water Diving: Physiological Effect as a
Function of Body Temperature 905
E.T. Long, Commander, Medical Corps, USN, NavyExperimental Diving Unit, Panama City, FL
.911
Overview of the Use of Different Gas
Mixtures in Self-contained DivingR.W. Bill Hamilton, Hamilton Research, Ltd.,
Tarrytown, NY
Session 22
Current Measurements Part A
Session Chair Albert J. Williams, 3rd
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution,Woods Hole, MA
Current Measurements Part B
Session Chair Archie Todd Morrison, III
McLane Research Labs, Inc.
East Falmouth, MA
Acoustic Current Meter Zero
Offset Drift 916
Albert J. Williams, 3r<\ Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution, Woods Hole, MA
Effects of Temporal and Vertical
Variability of Echo Amplitude on
ADCP Selection and Performance 922
Diane E. DiMassa, U. Mass Dartmouth, North
Dartmouth, MA; Bruce A. Magnell and John M. Lund,
Woods Hole Group, Inc., East Falmouth, MA
Multifrequency HF Radar Observations of
Surface Currents: Measurements from
Different Systems and Environments 942
John Vesecky, Jessica Drake and Michal Plume,Electrical Engineering Dept, University of California at
Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz CA; Lorelle Meadows and
Yolanda Fernandez, Department of Naval Architecture
and Marine Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor, Ml; Calvin Teague, STAR Laboratory, Stanford
University, Stanford, CA; Ken Davidson and Jeff
Paduan, Department of Oceanography, Naval
Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA
Results From the First Successful
Field Deployment of the McLane
Moored Profiler 949
Archie T. Morrison, III, McLane Research
Laboratories, Inc. and Woods Hole OceanographicInstitution; John M. Toole, Scott E. Worrilow, and
Kenneth W. Doherty, Woods Hole OceanographicInstitution; Roger Lukas, University of Hawaii at
Manoa, HI
The Effects of Marine Fouling on the Performance
of a Single-Point Acoustic DopplerCurrent Sensor Mounted on a
TABS-II Spar Buoy 956
J.N. Walpert, N.L. Guinasso, Jr., Leslie C. Bender,and Linwood L. Lee III, Geochemical and
Environmental Research Group, Texas A&M University,
College Station, TX; F.J. Kelly, Conrad Blucher
Institute for Surveying and Science, Texas A&M
University-Corpus Christi, Corpus Christi, TX
Detection of the Number of Signals in
Super-Resolution Ocean Surface
Current Algorithm for OSMAR2000 962
Yang Shaolin, Ke Hengyu, Hou Jiechang, Wu
Xiongbin, Tian Jiansheng, and Wen Biyang, Collegeof Electronic Information, Wuhan University, Wuhan,
P.R. China
Super-Resolution Ocean Surface
Current Algorithm Based on MUSIC
for OSMAR2000 930
Yang Shaolin, Ke Hengyu, Hou Jiechang, Wu
Shicai, Yang Zijie, Wen Biyang, and Wu Xiongbin,College of Electronic Information, Wuhan University,Wuhan, P.R. China
Session 23
Oceanographic ShipsSession Chair Jack Bash
University of Rhode Island, Rl
A Parametric Investigation of the
Influence of Seakeeping on Research
Vessel Design 967
A.D. Eisele and S. Balasubramanian, Band, Lavis &
Associates, Severna Park, MD
XXXV
Tsbl© of
New Survey Ships and Systems for the
Royal Navy 973
Richard Labone, Vosper Thornycroft Ltd;
Jan Haug Kristensen and Freddy Pohner, KongsbergSimrad AS
A Low Cost Real-Time Link For a
Coastal Research Vessel 980
Alessandro Bocconcelli, John Murray, and
Christopher Powell, Center for Marine Science, UNC-
Wilmington, Wilmington, NC
Electronic Activated Pelican Hook 983
George M. White and Rex Johnson, University of
Washington, School of Oceanography, Seattle, WA
Session 24
Broad Band Active Sonar
Session Chair Dr. Dave Lemonds
ORINCON,Hawaii
Session Co-Chair. Dr. Daniel D. Sternlicht
Orincon Corporation,San Diego, CA
Two Dimensional and Three
Dimensional Imaging Results
Using Blazed Arrays 985
R. Lee Thompson, Jason Seawall, and Tim
Josserand, Advanced Technology Laboratory AppliedResearch Laboratories, The University of Texas at
Austin, Austin, TX
Synthesizing Wide-Band Sparse
Arrays by Simulated Annealing 989
A. Trucco, Department of Biophysical and Electronic
Engineering (DIBE), University of Genoa, Genova, Italy
The Research of Underwater Target
Imaging with High Moving Sonar
Based on Synthetic ApertureMethod 995
Jia Xu, Xingzhou Jiang, and Jingyuan Zhang, Navy
Engineering University, Wuhan; Jinsong Tang,Acoustic Research Institute, CAS, Beijing;
Ling Lu, Wuhan Technology University, Wuhan, China
Synthetic Aperture Sonar ImagingBased on Auto-focusing Method 1001
Jia Xu and Xingzhou Jiang, Navy Engineering
University, Wuhan, China; Jinsong Tang and Cunhua
Zhang, Acoustic Research Institute, Science Academyof China, Beijing, China
Session 25
Coral Reefs
Session Chair. Dr. Tony Jones
Consulting Oceanographer,San Francisco, CA
Image Classification of Coral
Reef Components from Underwater
Color Video 1008
Maricor Soriano, Sheila Marcos, and Caesar
Saloma, National Institute of Physics, University of the
Philippines, Diliman Quezon City, Philippines;
Miledel Quibilan and Porfirio Alino, Marine Science
Institute, University of the Philippines, Diliman Quezon
City, Philippines
Simple Measurements of Small Scale
Water Motion in Coral Reefs 1014
Yasuo Furushima and Mineo Okamoto, JapanMarine Science and Technology Center (JAMSTEC),
Japan; Teruhisa Komatsu, Ocean Research institute,
University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
Development of Short Core SamplingMachine from Live Coral 1020
M. Okamoto and H. Yamaguchi, JAMSTEC,
Yokosuka, Japan; S. Nojima, Kyushu University,
Kyushu, Japan
Session 26
Underwater Robotics
Session Chair Mark Brown
MBARI, Marine Technology Society,
Monterey Bay Section Chairman
Monterey, CA
Relative Position Estimation for
Manipulation Tasks by Fusing Vision
and Inertial Measurements 1025
Andreas Huster and Stephen M. Rock, AerospaceRobotics Lab, Stanford University, CA, and Monterey
Bay Aquarium Research Institute, Moss Landing, CA
xxxvi
4><M"
<m
New Capabilities of the REDERMORUnmanned Underwater Vehicle 1032
Norbert Toumelin and Jerome Lemaire, GroupeD'Etude Sous-Marine De L'Atlantique (GESMA),Underwater Robotics Department, Brest Naval, France
Development of an IntelligentUnderwater Robotic Manipulator
System 1036
Chen-Chou Lin, Department of Mechanical and Marine
Engineering; Chung-Cheng Chang, Department of
Electrical Engineering; Mu-Der Jeng, Department of
Electrical Engineering; Jung-Hua Wang, Department of
Electrical Engineering, National Taiwan Ocean
University, Keelung, Taiwan, R.O.C
The Controller of the
REDERMOR II 1041
N. Toumelin, Groupe D'Etude Sous-Marine De
L'Atlantique (GESMA), Underwater Robotics
Department, Brest Naval, France
Controlling an Uninstrumented ROV
Manipulator By Visual Servoing 1047
Eric Marchand, Francois Chaumette, and Fabien
Spindler, IRISA - INRIA Rennes, Campus de
Beaulieu, Cedex, France; Michel Perrier, Ifremer
Toulon, Cedex, France
The Study of Ultrasonic Distance
Measurement Device for an
Teleoperated Robotic Manipulator
System 1054
Chung Cheng Chang, Jung Hwa Wang, Mu Der
Jeng, and Shih Ho Tseng, Department of Electrical
Engineering, National Taiwan Ocean University,Keelung, Taiwan; Chen Chou Lin, Department of
Mechanical and Marine Engineering, National Taiwan
Ocean University, Keelung, Taiwan
Real-time Vision-based Station
Keeping for Underwater Robots 1058
Sjoerd van der Zwaan and Jose Santos-Victor,Instituto de Sistemas e Rob6tica, Instituto SuperiorTecnico, Lisboa, Portugal
A Simulation Environment for
Unmanned Underwater Vehicles
Development ..1066
Ga. Bruzzone, R. Bono, M. Caccia, and
G. Veruggio, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche,
Istituto Automazione Navale, Genova, Italy
STAR (Subsea Tools Application Research)Design of a General Purpose Subsea
Torque Tool for ROV or UUV 1073
M. Fan, Y. B. Low, J. S. Smith, and J. C. Evans,
Department of Electrical Engineering and Electronics,The University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK; J. Seim,NUI, Gravdalsveien, Bergen, Norway
Session 27
Remotely Operated Vehicles (ROVs)Session Chair Brock J. Rosenthal
Chair MTS San Diego Section,Ocean Innovations, La Jolla, CA
Underwater Vision Method for
Low-Visibility Turbulent Conditions 1080
L. Botelho-Ribeiro, Industrial Electronics Dept.,Guimaraes, Portugal
A Methodological Framework for
Developing ROV-ManipulatorSystems for Underwater Unmanned
Intervention 1085
B. Solvang, and Z. Deng, Narvik Institute of
Technology, Narvik, Norway; T.K. Lien, Norwegian
University of Science and Technology, Norway
Structure of Underwater Intervention
Manipulators in Workspace Constraint
Environment and Architecture of their
Control System 1092
B. Solvang and Z. Deng, Narvik Institute of
Technology, Narvik, Norway; T.K. Lien, Norwegian
University of Science and Technology, Norway
Deep Precision Deployment and
Heavy Package Recoveries by the
ROPOS R.O.V. System 1100
Keith Shepherd and Kim Wallace, Canadian Scientific
Submersible Facility, Institute of Ocean Sciences,
Sidney, B.C., Canada
Toward Model Based DynamicPositioning of Underwater Robotic
Vehicles 1106
David A. Smallwood and Louis L. Whitcomb,
Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Johns
Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD
xxxvii
Rr S hf '""
The Man-machine Interface of
ROTIS R.O.V. SystemG.B. Meo, B. Papalia, ENEA
1115
An Automated Maneuver Control
Framework for a Remotely OperatedVehicle 1121
Sergio L. Fraga and JoSo B. Sousa, Laboratdrio de
Sistemas e Tecnologias Subaquatica, Faculdade de
Engenharia da Universidade do Porto, Porto, Portugal;Anouck Girard, Ocean Engineering Graduate Group,The University Of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA;Alfredo Martins, Departamento de EngenhariaElectrotecnica, Instituto Superior de Engenharia do
Porto, Porto, Portugal
Integration and Sea Trials of ARAMISWith the Romeo ROV.... 1129
M. Caccia, R. Bono, Ga. Bruzzone, Gi. Bruzzone, E.
Spirandelli, and G. Veruggio, Consiglio Nazionale
delle Ricerche, Istituto Automazione Navale, Genova,
Italy
A Pilot-Aid for ROV Based Tracking of
Gelatinous Animals in the Midwater 1137
Jason Rife and Stephen M. Rock, Stanford University,CA, and Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute,Moss Landing, CA
High Voltage Testing of an ROV Electro- OpticalTether Cable 1145
Ed Mellinger, Monterey Bay Aquarium Research
Institute (MBARI), Moss Landing CA; Torben Aabo,Power Cable Consultants Inc., (PCC), Ballston Spa,NY; Andrew Bowen and Robert A. Petitt, Jr., WoodsHole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), Woods Hole,MA; Carlos Katz, Cable Technology Laboratories, Inc.
(CTL), New Brunswick, NJ
Session 28
Real Time Measurements /
Ocean MonitoringSession Chair Catherine Woody
National Data Buoy Center
Session Co-Chair Rebecca Smith
Naval Oceanographic Office
A Real Time Measurement Systemfor Red Tide Studies 1151
I.H.Y. Lam and I.J. Hodgkiss, Department of Ecology& Biodiversity, The University of Hong Kong, Hong
Kong
The West Florida Shelf
ECOHAB-ONR-COMPS (ENC)Monitoring Array 1158
Rick Cole, Oceanographic and Research DivingOperations, University of South Florida, College of
Marine Science, Ocean Circulation Group, St.
Petersburg, FL
South Florida Ocean Measurement
Center (SFOMC)"A Coastal Ocean Observatory" 1163
Garth Jensen, SFOMC Executive Director, Naval
Surface Warfare Center, Carderock Division, West
Bethesda, MD
National Ocean Service Real-Time
Monitoring infrastructure, Working For
America's Coasts 1171
Joseph M. Welch, U.S. Department of Commerce,National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,National Ocean Service Center for OperationalOceanographic Products and Services, Silver Spring,MD
Remote Internet Instrumentation for
Monitoring Ocean Data 1176
R.H. Cockrum, Senior Member, IEEE; D.L. Clark,
Member, IEEE; S.T. Kelly, Life Member, IEEE,Electrical and Computer Engineering Department,California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, CA
An Overview of the Coastal Ocean Monitoringand Prediction System (COMPS) 1183
Clifford R. Merz, P.E., COMPS Program Director,
University of South Florida, College of Marine Science,St. Petersburg, FL
xxxviii
A Real Time Environmental Data Monitoring,Management and Analysis System for the
Coral Reefs Off the Coast of Belize 1188
Thomas B. Opishinski, Interactive Oceanographies,East Greenwich, Rl; Malcolm L. Spaulding,Department of Ocean Engineering, University of Rhode
Island, Narragansett, Rl; Klaus Riitzler and Michael
Carpenter, Caribbean Coral Reef Ecosystems,Department of Systematic Biology, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, DC
Synoptic Data Collection and Products
at the Naval Oceanographic Office 1198
Rebecca A. Smith, Lamar Russell, Bruce D.
McKenzie, and Deborah Toca Bird, Naval
Oceanographic Office, Stennis Space Center, MS
A Multi-Agency Solution for Coastal
Surveys - SHOALS in the Pacific 1204
Scott Ebrite, Naval Oceanographic Office, Stennis
Space Center, MS; Bob Pope, Naval OceanographicOffice, Stennis Space Center, MS; W. Jeff Lillycrop,US Army Corps of Engineers, Mobile, AL
Session 29
Acoustics and Oceanographic ShipsSession Chair ...Tim Gates
Vice President,ManTech Advanced Systems International, Inc.,
Bethesda, MD
Session Co-Chair, Robert Herman
NAVSEA
Fisheries Research Vessel
Hydrodynamic Design MinimizingBubble Sweepdown 1212
Gabor Karafiath, Naval Architect, Resistance &
Powering Department, Naval Surface Warfare Center,
Carderock Division, West Bethesda, MD; John M.
Hotaling, Deputy Program Manager, Research Vessel
Program, National Marine Fisheries Service, Silver
Spring, MD; James M. Meehan, Mission Manager,Research Vessel Program, National Marine Fisheries
Service, Silver Spring, MD
Acoustic Improvements For USNS
Pathfinder (T-AGS 60) Class
Oceanographic Ships 1224
Timothy A Gates, Mantech Systems EngineeringCorporation, Bethesda, MD; Robert P. Herman,
Program Executive Office; Expeditionary Warfare,
Washington DC
T-AGS 60 Class Bubble SweepdownDiverter Fence Design 1233
Robert L. Tutton, Sonar Self-Noise and Structureborne
Signatures Assessment Branch, Naval Surface Warfare
Center, Carderock Division, West Bethesda, MD;
Timothy A. Gates, MANTECH Systems EngineeringCorp., Bethesda, MD; Kenneth M. Forgach, ShipResistance and Powering Dept., HydromechanicsDirectorate, Naval Surface Warfare Center, West
Bethesda, MD
Effects of Naturally Occurring Bubbles on
Multibeam Sonar Operations 1241
Susan M. Sebastian, Naval Oceanographic Office,Stennis Space Center, MS; Jerald W. Caruthers,
University of Southern Mississippi, Stennis SpaceCenter, MS
A Collaborative Effort to Meet
New Zealand's Mapping Requirements:Multibeam Echosounder Integration,Acceptance Testing, and Antarctic
Mapping Aboard the Research Vessel
Tangaroa 1248
Art Kleiner and Jim Chance, C & C Technologies,Inc.; Neville Ching, John Mitchell, and Fred Smits,National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research
Ltd, New Zealand; John Spittal and Robert Spillard,
Land Information, New Zealand
Session 30
Operational Oceanography /
Information ProcessingSession Chair Dr. John Lever
Naval Oceanographic Office
Proof of Concept Naval OceanographicOffice Survey Operations Center.. 1257
Jerry M. Gathof, Naval Oceanographic Office, Stennis
Space Center, MS
xxxix
A Broadband Ship-to-ShoreCommunications Network for the
Naval Oceanographic Office 1262
Stanley Raffa, Naval Oceanographic Office, Stennis
Space Center, MS; Steven Douglas, Naval Surface
Warfare Center, Corona, CA
Production Management and Control for
Operational Oceanography 1268
Christine M. Jarrett, John A. Lever, and William J.
Moseley, Naval Oceanographic Office, Stennis SpaceCenter, MS
Implementation of the Meteorology and
Oceanography Geospatial Initiative at the
Naval Oceanographic Office 1272
Dianne Edson, John A. Lever and Craig Kelly, Naval
Oceanographic Office, Stennis Space Center, MS; Jim
Goudeau, The Analytic Sciences Corporation, Stennis
Space Center, MS
Session 31
Observatory Communication TechnologySession Chair Dr. Duane R. Edgington
MBARI
Monterey, CA
"Smart Network" Infrastructure for the MBARI
Ocean Observing System 1276
Thomas C. O'Reilly, Duane Edgington, Daniel
Davis, Richard Henthorn, Michael P. McCann,
Timothy Meese, Wayne Radochonski, Michael Risi,Brent Roman, and Rich Schramm, Monterey BayAquarium Research Institute, Moss Landing, CA
A Compact Coastal Ocean
Observing System 1283
Jason Gobat, Robert Weller, Bryan Way, and JeffreyLord, Department of Physical Oceanography, WoodsHole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA
A Multidisciplinary Deep Sea Long-Term
Observatory in Japan 1290
Andrew M. Clark, Maritime Communication Services,Harris Corporation, Melbourne, FL; Hiroyuki Sekino,
Japan Drilling Co., Ltd.(JDC), Tokyo, Japan
A New Mooring Controller Platform:
An Evolution of the OASIS Instrument
Controller Toward a Distributed Ocean
Observing System 1296
Timothy Meese, Duane R. Edgington, WayneRadochonski, Kent Headley, and Scott Jensen,
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, Moss
Landing, CA
NEPTUNE Gigabit Ethernet Submarine
Cable System 1303
A.R. Maffei, J. Bailey, A. Bradley, A.D. Chave, S.N.
White, S. Lerner; and D. Yoerger; Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA; G.
Massion, Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute,Moss Landing, CA; H. Frazier, Dominet Systems, San
Jose, CA; R. Buddenberg, Naval Post Graduate
School, Monterey, CA
Session 32
Coastal Ocean NowcastingSession Chair Dr. James K. Lewis
Senior Scientist,
Systems Oceanography, Scientific Solutions, Inc.,
Kalaheo, HI
The Northern Gulf of Mexico
Littoral Initiative 1311
Suzanne N. Carroll, Planning Systems, Inc., Stennis
Space Center, MS; Carl Szczechowski, Naval
Oceanographic Office, Stennis Space Center, MS
Observing and Forecasting Coastal
Currents: Texas Automated BuoySystem (TABS) 1318
Norman L. Guinasso, Jr., Leslie C. Bender, III,Linwood L. Lee, III, and John N. Walpert,Geochemical and Environmental Research Group,Texas A&M University; Joseph Yip, Robert O. Reid,Matt Howard, David A. Brooks, and Robert D.
Hetland, Department of Oceanography, Texas A&M
University; Robert D. Martin, Texas General Land
Office, Austin, TX
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Simulation of Hurricane Waves with
Parametric Wind Fields 1323
Christopher D. Martino, Pacific Missile Range Facility,Department of Defense, Kekaha, HI; Kwok Fai
Cheung and Amal C. Phadke, Department of Ocean &
Resources Engineering, University of Hawaii at Manoa,Honolulu, HI; Samuel H. Houston, Hurricane Research
Division, National Oceanic and AtmosphericAdministration, Miami, FL
HICUP Hurricane Induced Coastal
Inundation Program 1331
Lawrence Brower, Elaine Tamaye, Brian Ishii,Benson Kim, and Edward Noda, Edward K. Noda and
Associates, Inc., Honolulu, HI; David Divoky,Engineering Methods & Applications, Inc., Jacksonville,FL
Development of Aquatic Environment
Measurement Systems of Estuaries
and Coastal Lagoons 1342
Kiyokazu Nishimura, Institute for Marine Resource &
Environment, Geological Survey of Japan, AIST,Ibaraki, Japan; Takao Tokuoka, Tokuoka Laboratoryfor Study of Coastal Lagoon Environments, Shimane,
Japan; Yoshihiro Ueno, Tokuoka Laboratory for Studyof Coastal Lagoon Environments, Shimane, Japan;Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology in
Hokuriku, Ishikawa, Japan; Yoshikazu Sampei,Shimane University, Shimane, Japan; Satoshi Suzaki,Senbon Denki Co., Ltd., Shizuoka, Japan; ShigeoMatsuda, Clovertech Inc., Musashino, Tokyo, Japan;
Syunsuke Kubota, OCC Corporation, Tokyo, Japan;Shigenori Suzuki, Tsurumi Seiki Co., Ltd., Kanagawa,
Japan
Volume Three
Session 33
Regional Ocean Observatories
Session Chair Dr. Paul Moersdorf
NOAA
An Assessment of the Noise Field Near
the Sable Gully Area 1348
Francine Desharnais and Nicole E.B. Collison,Defence Research Establishment Atlantic, Dartmouth,Nova Scotia, Canada
NEPTUNE Regional ObservatorySystem Design 1356
D.H. Rodgers, P.M. Beauchamp, and H. Kirkham, Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA; A.D. Chave and
A. Maffei, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Woods Hole, MA; S. Gaudet, Canadian National
Research Council, Victoria, Canada; G. Massion,
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Inst., Moss Landing,CA; T. M. McGinnis, University of Washington, AppliedPhysics Laboratory, Seattle, WA; W.S.D. Wilcock,
University of Washington, School of Oceanography,Seattle WA
NEPTUNE: An Interactive
Submarine Laboratory Network at
the Scale of a Tectonic Plate 1366John Delaney, G. Ross Heath, and William Wilcock,School of Oceanography, University of Washington,Seattle, WA; Alan Chave and Andrew Maffei, Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, MA;Harold Kirkham and Patricia Beauchamp, Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of
Technology, Pasadena, CA; Bruce Howe, AppliedPhysics Laboratory, University of Washington, Seattle,WA
The Design of the NEPTUNE
Power System 1374
Harold Kirkham, Vatch# Vorperian, and Paul
Bowerman, California Institute of Technology,Pasadena, CA; Bruce M. Howe, Applied PhysicsLaboratory, University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Session 34
Marine Mammals
Session Chair Gregory D. Kaufman
Pacific Whale Foundation
Use of High Resolution Space Imageryto Monitor the Abundance, Distribution,and Migration Patterns of Marine
Mammal Populations 1381
Ron Abileah, SRI International, Menlo Park, CA
High Frequency Marine Mammal
Mitigation Active Sonar System 1388
Peter Stein, Jason Rudzinsky, and Mike Birmann,Scientific Solutions, Inc., Nashua, NH; William Ellison,Marine Acoustics Inc., Litchfield, CT; Joseph Johnson,Chief of Naval Operations, Arlington, VA
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