Paolo Favali
(INGV Roma, I)
19/10/2013, 08:30
Invited Lecture
EMSO (http://www.emso-eu.org) is a large-scale European Research Infrastructure (RI) of the ESFRI roadmap composed of fixed-point, seafloor and water-column observatories with the basic scientific objective of near- and real-time, long-term monitoring of environmental processes related to the interaction between the geosphere, biosphere, and hydrosphere. It is geographically distributed in key...
Prof.
Kim Juniper
(Ocean Networks Canada, University of Victoria)
19/10/2013, 09:20
Invited Lecture
Ocean Networks Canada operates major cabled undersea observatories in the northeast Pacific Ocean, and a cabled mini-observatory in the Arctic Ocean. These observatories support a variety of underwater instruments ranging from seismometers to chemical sensors and cameras. Access to all data collected on our networks is open to all researchers and free of charge. After experimenting with...
Prof.
Gianni Pavan
(University of Pavia - Centro Interdisciplinare di Bioacustica e Ricerche Ambientali)
19/10/2013, 10:50
Invited Lecture
INFN and INGV develop and run deep sea infrastructures and instruments for a wide range of scientific research developed by a network of institutional partners.
The marine bioacoustic research began in 2004 with the NEMO-OnDE platform deployed at 2000m depth 25 km off Catania (Sicily) and connected to the INFN-LNS laboratory of Catania by fiber optic cables. Wideband acoustic data have...
Michel Andre
(UPC, SP)
19/10/2013, 11:40
Invited Lecture
The growing scientific and societal concern about the effects of underwater sound on marine ecosystems has been recently recognized through the introduction of several international initiatives aiming at measuring the environmental impact of ocean noise on large spatial and temporal scales. From a regulatory perspective, the European Marine Strategy Framework Directive includes noise as one of...