From Deseret News archives:
Undersea explorer tested
Vessel dedicated to surveying unknown parts of the ocean
It's the Black Sea, not far from Ukraine, a region long closed to outsiders and now yielding a treasure trove of Byzantine vessels that met their ends 1,000 or more years ago.
For Ballard the archaeologist, those vessels and their contents are a delight.
For Ballard the explorer, the modern technology he's testing for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is pretty exciting, too.
Thanks to the massive speed of modern communications, talking to him from a desk in Silver Spring, Md., while he is aboard the research vessel Alliance in the Black Sea is almost as simple as talking to him in person.
And that's the idea.
Ballard is testing a system planned for use aboard NOAA's new vessel Okeanos Explorer, scheduled to go to sea next year as the first U.S. government vessel dedicated to exploring unknown parts of the ocean.
"Its mission, literally, is to go where no one has gone before on planet Earth," Ballard said.
The plan is to have dozens or hundreds of scientists participate without ever having to leave their homes and universities.
The ship will be in high-speed communications with a center at the University of Rhode Island, and from there via Internet2 to universities and science centers across the country, calling on whatever expertise is needed.
Ballard likens it to a hospital emergency room.
"An emergency room has no idea what the ambulance is going to deliver at 3 o'clock Sunday morning," he explained. "They don't know if it's going to be a head injury, a mother having a baby, a heart attack or whatever," so the hospital has a system for doctors to be on call.
"Now we're doing the same sort of thing in support of NOAA," he said.
The center in Rhode Island will operate like the NASA space center in Houston, which is constantly in contact with the astronauts in outer space, just as Rhode Island will be with the aquanauts in inner space.
Above Ballard's head, the underwater camera continues to move across the seafloor, passing mainly stones and sand and, suddenly, a series of straight lines and right angles.
Those most likely mark a wreck, the remains of some ancient vessel the explorers will turn and scan again.
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