from SONNE OASIS Blog

Packing  

Photos: Sinikka Lennartz

The info-screens that are set up in every lab don’t leave any doubt: the next waypoint is „Anfahrt Male“, so the cruise’s end is approaching. Most of the instruments were switched off this morning, and for the last time, people gathered with all kinds of different sample bottles (and gloves! see previous blog…) in the […]

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Coriolis effect?

Sonja and her containers (Photo: Sonja Wiegmann)

~2° S, 72° E: The last Long Battle (26-hour station) is closer to an end. Everyone is exhausted but nobody is giving up. Situated around 2° S, we are very close to the Wall*. Recommended in August 2 Blogpost, the forces of the Wall will change the direction of the “toilet whirlpool” once we cross the […]

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SO235 Second weekly report

Figure 3: Chlorophyll-a (mg/m3) map from 29.07.-03.08.2014 (Image by Astrid Bracher and Tilman Dinter, AWI/ IUP).

28.07.-03.08.2014 from Port Louis/ Mauritius to Malé/ Maldives Here is the follow-up of our OASIS (“Organic very short-lived substances and their air-water exchange from the Indian Ocean to the stratosphere”) – SONNE SO235 cruise. The research cruise and the project are funded within the framework of the German national BMBF (Federal Ministry of Education and […]

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A Game of Gloves

Picture: Martina is Germany’s next Glove model model (@Alex Zavarsky/Martina Lohmann).

The North After our last CTD yesterday(1.8.2014) at 8° 26.52 S 66° E we are heading back to the Wall (equator), the North. Unlike in the far North, there won’t be ice and cold weather waiting for us, but still an invisible line where the Coriolis force changes its sign as well the latitude. There […]

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Our Bergfest

SO 235 Staff

Heading south again to carry out more measurements, we managed to leave the pirate danger zone and had therefore the one and only chance to have a big party outside: our Bergfest. Traditionally this is organized by the scientific crew and paid for by the chief scientist (thank god that I’m only part of the […]

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Morning duties

Henning Finkenzeller checking his Cavity Enhanced DOAS instrument. Photo: Kirstin Krüger

It is 5 in the morning and your cell phone is trying to wake you up. Well, actually the clocks were set one hour earlier, as or cruise has brought us now considerably to the east. The three shifts for the crew members (12:00-4:00, 4:00-8:00, 8:00-12:00, both am and pm) were equally shortened by twenty […]