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Commissioning
of the NOAA Ship Ka'imimoana
NOAA Press Release, Aug 20, 1996
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KA'IMIMOANA receives a traditional
Hawaiian blessing
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KA'IMIMOANA at Pearl Harbor
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NOAA 96-R804
Contact: Jeanne
Kouhestani
NOAA WELCOMES NEW SHIP TO FLEET; KA'IMIMOANA TO SUPPORT OCEANOGRAPHIC
AND CLIMATE RESEARCH IN PACIFIC
A new federal research
ship based in Hawaii will be used to help scientists better understand
the forces in the equatorial Pacific Ocean that drive the world's climate.
KA'IMIMOANA will receive a traditional Hawaiian blessing today as it is
officially welcomed to its home port in Honolulu.
The National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration ship KA'IMIMOANA (Ocean Seeker) and its
mission will be introduced to members of Hawaii's congressional delegation,
oceanographic research community, other federal agencies, and local businesses
during the welcoming ceremony and to the general public during a subsequent
open house.
"This addition to
the fleet will help NOAA continue its important research on the El Niño
phenomenon and other seasonal climate variations," said Rear Admiral William
L. Stubblefield, director of the Office of NOAA Corps Operations, the
commissioned service of NOAA that operates and manages the agency's fleet
of ships and aircraft. "KA'IMIMOANA, which has replaced the 30-year-old
DISCOVERER, will be used primarily to deploy, recover and service our
approximately 70 deep ocean buoys that measure wind direction and speed,
air temperature and humidity, and temperature of the ocean in the equatorial
Pacific. The new ship and the support it provides will help ensure that
this critical program can continue to provide NOAA and other agencies,
both domestic and international, with the information needed to understand
how the warm water of the equatorial Pacific affects climate not only
in the Hawaiian islands, but worldwide, and to predict El Niño events
and future climate changes."
The 224-ft. KA'IMIMOANA
carries modern computer and laboratory facilities that will enable NOAA
and collaborating scientists to conduct additional investigations and
collect oceanic and atmospheric data for climate studies while underway
to the buoy arrays. The ship's computer systems collect data from a multitude
of ship and mission sensors, then integrate and store the data for presentation.
High speed communications between the ship and shore facilities allow
datasets to be transferred ashore on a near-real-time basis. These data
and other information about the ship's current activities are also available
via Internet at: http://www.tao.noaa.gov/tao/kaimi/
NOTE TO EDITORS:
Further information about the KA'IMIMOANA and its mission can be found on
the Internet: http://www.pmc.noaa.gov/pmc.htm and
http://www.tao.noaa.gov/ For information about the NOAA Corps,
see: http://www.nc.noaa.gov/noacorps.html |