We were too busy and had no time to update our lab blog in 2014.
Gradually, we would like to post our memories.
In late November, 17th meeting of the Japanese Coral Reef Society (JCRS) took place in Kochi.
Unfortunately, Fred got sudden sickness and needed to stay in hospital for a while, and our Sensei also needed to stay with him to take care; they canceled their trip. It was really sad, but the rest of us did well at the meeting. We did two oral and two poster presentations, and all the discussions were interesting.
On the last day of the meeting, Fred finally got out from the hospital. Everything went well indeed!
Harii Lab's blog
Wednesday, 4 March 2015
Wednesday, 15 October 2014
After the typhoon Vongfong
This summer, we got a new dormitory in the station, and the old one was destroyed.
Then, we got nice view of the ocean from our office!
However, this also means that we lost our shield from storms, and we worried about this.
The time had come. A big typhoon Vongfong passed by last weekend.
Gift from the typhoon was a pretty salt crystal decoration on our window...
This tree in front of our office had a hard time since this summer.
Even after he got his branches cut, he grew young leaves.
The problem was that he also lost his shield like us.
Sadly, salty rain of the typhoon made his leaves dead.
Hope he will recover during this winter, since he used to be a house of little birds.
Then one day, he will be big enough to protect our office from storms.
Then, we got nice view of the ocean from our office!
However, this also means that we lost our shield from storms, and we worried about this.
The time had come. A big typhoon Vongfong passed by last weekend.
Gift from the typhoon was a pretty salt crystal decoration on our window...
This tree in front of our office had a hard time since this summer.
Even after he got his branches cut, he grew young leaves.
The problem was that he also lost his shield like us.
Sadly, salty rain of the typhoon made his leaves dead.
Hope he will recover during this winter, since he used to be a house of little birds.
Then one day, he will be big enough to protect our office from storms.
Friday, 25 July 2014
Chikyu cruise, the end
After 10 days of work at sea and the last dive of the ROV yesterday night until this morning, we headed back to Okinawa today and we will disembark tomorrow morning in Nakagusku port.
Actually now is almost the busiest time of the cruise as everybody needs to pack, clean, prepare the samples for shipping and finish writing the cruise report.
Despite the several technical problems we encountered, we could still get quite some work done. For us, from now on, the "real" work will start as all the data and samples we obtained now will need to be analysed and published. So we all have many hours in the lab or sitting in front of our computers awaiting. But still when doing the boring job it will be nice to remember the nice times of this cruise.
The ROV about the enter the water
for his last dive of the cruise.
Cape Hedo, in Okinawa Island viewed from the helipad.
Actually as everything on this ship, the helipad is pretty big as it can receive helicopters carrying up to 35 people when it is necessary to change the crew at sea. People even use it to run around, when they prefer to enjoy fresh air rather than the gym.
And as comfortable as this ship is, we are all looking forward to find back our homes and loved ones.
Thursday, 24 July 2014
Chikyu cruise, day 10
Basically the Chikyu is extremely comfortable and absolutely everything is made so you only need to care about your research. Each room has its own toilet and shower. They have bunk beds but during this cruise and because there is lots of space on the ship, we can all have single cabins. Everyday, someone comes to change your towels and make your bed. Like in a hotel!
My cabin
Even with a small desk space
Initially I felt this is a bit too much, but then I realised that
actually scientists on board are a minority. But if you look at the
crew and technicians on board, well those guys are doing the real tough
job, moving cranes and steel pipes around, fixing and unfixing anything
and everything. And all this wearing full protective equipment outside
with 30 degrees in any weather. "Full protective equipment" is a really
thick suit with long sleeves, reinforced shoes, helmet and glasses.
Scientists need to wear that too when going outside, and I can tell you
than it only takes a few minutes to be drenched in sweat with this
portable sauna. Then if you consider that most cruises are 24h/7
days a week work for 2 months, you can imagine that a freshly made bed helps the
crew to relax after a 12h shift and keep being fully efficient for the
whole cruise.
So let’s continue the tour of the life on board, not only everyday you get fresh towels, but also you don’t need to worry about your laundry, each cabin has laundry bags, you simply put the laundry bag with your dirty clothes in front of the door. A few hours later, they are magically back in front of your room washed and neatly folded.
I already spoke about the food, and after 10 days, I am still not fed up of the food on board because not every day, but every meal is different with a mix of western food, ethnic food from wherever, and Japanese food.
So let’s continue the tour of the life on board, not only everyday you get fresh towels, but also you don’t need to worry about your laundry, each cabin has laundry bags, you simply put the laundry bag with your dirty clothes in front of the door. A few hours later, they are magically back in front of your room washed and neatly folded.
I already spoke about the food, and after 10 days, I am still not fed up of the food on board because not every day, but every meal is different with a mix of western food, ethnic food from wherever, and Japanese food.
Did I already mention that the food is really good?
After dinner, it is nice to socialise a bit playing with colleagues if we have a bit of time.
If you are more of the reading type, there is a big choice
of books and manga both in Japanese and English
But after all this food, the gym is an essential place unless we aim at a sumo career back on land.
As you can see the gym is pretty well equipped
But then after a long day working, hard workout at the gym, a shower is very welcome...
Or what about a sauna first?
And after a sauna, of course a bath is great...
...but a jacuzzi is even better.
And after all this, you are just perfectly relax to sleep well and deep until your next shift!
P.S. It may not look like when reading this blog, but actually for the essential part of the day we are working, and often we are just too tired to enjoy half of those things... I even started to skip some meals, and that means a lot!
P.P.S. The adventures are not finished as while writing this blog, the core broke (I guess that fits into "technical problem") and now the ROV (who works for once!) is trying to look for it...
Tuesday, 22 July 2014
Chikyu cruise, day 9
Today the first core was made, not my little sediment push cores of a few centimetres, this time they are making a “real” one, going down 100 m or more into the rock. People were quite excited.
The first person to go near the core needs to wear full oxygen mask to check the level of toxic gases (radioactivity was measured directly at the bottom before coring, because hydrothermal vents have often quite some natural radioactivity). Then when he gives the ok sign, then other people can approach and start processing the core.
However, the area is very restricted for security reasons.
This is the part that actually cores into the rock.
It is not very sharp but it is very efficient.
Then the core is cut into smaller section, more easy to process.
After this step the core will be cut into two parts, one part will be untouched and kept a reference, and the scientists will work on the other half. Tomorrow I will try to sneak into the lab and take a few pictures of the core processing. But only if I am not too seasick as the swell of the typhoon number 10 is slowly reaching us, and the captain plans that tomorrow afternoon will be some serious shaking...
In the meantime, I think I should get some food into my belly to keep it stable in the rough sea...
Monday, 21 July 2014
Chikyu cruise, days 3,4,5 ... 8
Well so much for updating the blog everyday...
Overall it is a great experience to be on such a ship, a certainly quite a unique one for a biologist. Maybe, like me, when you were small and you had your small shovel in the hand, you were dreaming of digging a hole so deep you could reach the magma (usually this step comes after an adult explains you that you cannot dig your hole until you reach the other end of the planet because there is some very hot magma inside the earth). Well now I am on a ship that can do exactly that (well at least in theory as there are still a few technical problems). In theory, this ship can reach the inside of the Earth that is 10 km under. So for example, if the water is 1000 m deep, then it can dig a hole 9 km into the sea bottom!
In this cruise we do not go too several kilometers below seafloor but we try to make several holes in an hydrothermal vent field (like a field of hot water springs) to understand better how things work inside of the rocks. Instead of going deep, we put some very sensitive sensors on the drilling head to measure many parameters directly while drilling. But because those sensors are fragile, if the temperature is too high we need to stop drilling.
So far despite the troubles with the ROV, we could drill a few holes, and I could even get some samples for my research, so from now on, whatever happens, at least I will not come back with empty hands.
I really appreciate those samples because it is actually really not that easy to manipulate a ROV. I like to imagine that the ROVs we use are some kind of mini ancestral deep-sea Goldorak (which I just learned from Wikipedia that it is the French name of "UFOロボ グレンダイザー") but clearly the anime robot looked easier to manipulate.
As the pilots are not used to make this kind of sampling, it is quite an adventure. Especially when we find sediments, often it is more sand than some sticky mud, so if the cores are a bit shaken, then very easily all the sediments fall from the core and we can start again. As all of this takes a lot of times, the geologists and other researchers do not like so much our ROV operation as they feel it is a waste of time and they would rather drill more holes. But with many scientists on board it is all about compromises to make everybody happy.
Overall it is a great experience to be on such a ship, a certainly quite a unique one for a biologist. Maybe, like me, when you were small and you had your small shovel in the hand, you were dreaming of digging a hole so deep you could reach the magma (usually this step comes after an adult explains you that you cannot dig your hole until you reach the other end of the planet because there is some very hot magma inside the earth). Well now I am on a ship that can do exactly that (well at least in theory as there are still a few technical problems). In theory, this ship can reach the inside of the Earth that is 10 km under. So for example, if the water is 1000 m deep, then it can dig a hole 9 km into the sea bottom!
The derrick on the ship reaches the
height of 130 m above the sea.
In this cruise we do not go too several kilometers below seafloor but we try to make several holes in an hydrothermal vent field (like a field of hot water springs) to understand better how things work inside of the rocks. Instead of going deep, we put some very sensitive sensors on the drilling head to measure many parameters directly while drilling. But because those sensors are fragile, if the temperature is too high we need to stop drilling.
So far despite the troubles with the ROV, we could drill a few holes, and I could even get some samples for my research, so from now on, whatever happens, at least I will not come back with empty hands.
I really appreciate those samples because it is actually really not that easy to manipulate a ROV. I like to imagine that the ROVs we use are some kind of mini ancestral deep-sea Goldorak (which I just learned from Wikipedia that it is the French name of "UFOロボ グレンダイザー") but clearly the anime robot looked easier to manipulate.
As the pilots are not used to make this kind of sampling, it is quite an adventure. Especially when we find sediments, often it is more sand than some sticky mud, so if the cores are a bit shaken, then very easily all the sediments fall from the core and we can start again. As all of this takes a lot of times, the geologists and other researchers do not like so much our ROV operation as they feel it is a waste of time and they would rather drill more holes. But with many scientists on board it is all about compromises to make everybody happy.
As I said in the previous post, work is
done 24h/24h on board
So scientists also need to be on duty
24h/24h in case samples or data arrive.
But now my shift is over and it is time to go the gym and then to go to bed...
Thursday, 17 July 2014
Field survey in Kanagawa
While Frederic is enjoying his cruise, I went out to my field survey in Kanagawa.
Unfortunately, I was so busy diving, collecting, and fixing specimens... had no time to take photos.
Anyways, the survey went well!
To proove that the place was nice, I paste a photo taken last time.
Unfortunately, I was so busy diving, collecting, and fixing specimens... had no time to take photos.
Anyways, the survey went well!
To proove that the place was nice, I paste a photo taken last time.
Beautiful sunset with Mt. Fuji. |
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