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High-tech coastal mapping ship commissioned in Norfolk, Va.

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Category: Climate
Type: News
Source: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Date: Friday, June 8th, 2012


NOAA's new coastal mapping vessel N.O.A.A. Ship Ferdinand R. Hassler.

Download here. (Credit: NOAA.)

N.O.A.A. today commissioned a state-of-the-art coastal mapping vessel, N.O.A.A. Ship Ferdinand R. Hassler, during a special ceremony at NOAA's Marine Operations Center-Atlantic in Norfolk, Va.

The new ship's primary mission will be to detect and monitor changes to the sea floor. Data collected by the ship will be used to update nautical charts, detect potential hazards to navigation, and enhance our understanding of the ever-changing marine environment.

"With the growth in the size of commercial vessels and the importance of waterborne business to our economic security, there is a critical need for accurate information about our coastal waterways," said Kathryn Sullivan, Ph.D., assistant secretary of business for environmental observation and prediction. "This advanced N.O.A.A. survey vessel will play a vital role in ensuring safe navigation and business as we work each and every day to position America for the future."

Ferdinand R. Hassler will operate mainly along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts, Caribbean Sea and Great Lakes in support of the N.O.A.A. Office of Coast Survey's nautical charting mission. The 124-foot ship will conduct basic hydrographic surveys of the sea floor using side scan and multibeam sonar technologies. The ship is also equipped to deploy buoys and unmanned submersibles and conduct general oceanographic research. Ferdinand R. Hassler's twin-hull design is particularly suited to NOAA's mission to map the ocean floor, as it is more stable than a single-hull vessel.

"NOAA Ship Ferdinand R. Hassler represents a major step forward in NOAA's effort to modernize the agency's fleet," said Rear Adm. Jonathan Bailey, director of the N.O.A.A. Office of Marine and Aviation Operations and the N.O.A.A. Corps. "This new, highly capable ship will enable surveyors to map waterways and coastal areas both accurately and efficiently."

The ship was named by a team of tenth-grade students and a teacher from Naugatuck High School in Naugatuck, Conn., who won a regional N.O.A.A. contest to name the vessel. The ship's namesake, Ferdinand Rudolph Hassler (1770-1843), served as the founding superintendent of the Coast Survey, the precursor to today's NOAA. The ship's sponsor, Catherine H. Sununu, wife of former New Hampshire U.S. Senator John Sununu, christened the vessel prior to the reading of the commissioning orders.

N.O.A.A. Ship Ferdinand R. Hassler is part of the N.O.A.A. fleet of ships and aircraft operated, managed and maintained by NOAA's Office of Marine and Aviation Operations, which includes both civilians and the commissioned officers of the N.O.A.A. Corps, one of the 7 uniformed services of the United States. The ship will be homeported in New Castle, N.H.

NOAA's Office of Coast Survey, originally formed by President Thomas Jefferson in 1807, updates the nation's nautical charts, surveys the coastal seafloor, responds to maritime emergencies and searches for underwater obstructions and wreckage that pose a danger to navigation.

NOAA's mission is to understand and predict changes in the Earth's environment, from the depths of the ocean to the surface of the sun, and to conserve and manage our coastal and marine resources. Join us on Facebook , Twitter and our other social media channels.

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