Southampton Marine and Maritime Institute news Interwoven LiveSite /smmi/news/latest.pageNews from SMMISMMI Student highlight - Sunke Trace-Kleeberg: Fighting flooding in the face of climate change with big data analysishttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/Sunke%20Trace-Kleeberg.jpg/smmi/news/2024/04/11-fighting-flood-in-the-face-of-climate-change.page/smmi/news/2024/04/11-fighting-flood-in-the-face-of-climate-change.pageThu, 11 Apr 2024 00:00:00 +0100Exploring STEAM with SMMI: Highlights from SOTSEF Science and Engineering Dayhttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/news/Engineering%20day%201.jpg/smmi/news/2024/04/05-exploring-steam-with-smmi.page/smmi/news/2024/04/05-exploring-steam-with-smmi.pageFri, 05 Apr 2024 00:00:00 +0100The Deep-Ocean Stewardship Initiative (DOSI) continues successful capacity development work in Namibiahttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/DOSI%20group.jpg/smmi/news/2023/12/01-deep-ocean-stweardship-initiative.pageIn collaboration with colleagues from the Namibian Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources (NatMIRC), and DOSI members from South Africa, Portugal and the UK, SOES staff member and DOSI Executive Director, Maria Baker, led an in-person, hands-on workshop in Swakopmund, Namibia in October/November 2023. /smmi/news/2023/12/01-deep-ocean-stweardship-initiative.pageFri, 01 Dec 2023 00:00:00 +0000SMMI/CMMI partnership: Exploring future collaborations and novel technologies for the creation of digital twinshttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/news/Diving%20a%20shipsheck.jpg/smmi/news/2023/07/04-exploring-future-collaborations-and-novel-technologies.page/smmi/news/2023/07/04-exploring-future-collaborations-and-novel-technologies.pageTue, 04 Jul 2023 00:00:00 +0100Celebrating HMS Challenger and 150 years of marine geology and oceanography https://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/dt-challenger-logo-1503.jpg/smmi/news/2022/11/01-celebrating-hms-challenger.pageHundreds of marine scientists of all flavours gathered in South Kensington, London, in early September at the Royal Geographic Society and Natural History Museum to celebrate the 150th Anniversary of the voyages of discovery of HMS Challenger – arguably the birth of oceanography. /smmi/news/2022/11/01-celebrating-hms-challenger.pageTue, 01 Nov 2022 00:00:00 +0000Exploring potential future ocean-facing education collaborations with the Cyprus Marine and Maritime Institute https://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/cmmi1.jpg/smmi/news/2022/11/01-exploring-potential-future-ocean-facing-education-collaborations.pageThe autumn sunshine in late September brought another visit to Southampton by our friends from the Cyprus Marine and Maritime Institute. CMMI is a major new research organisation based in Larnaka in the eastern Mediterranean supported by the MaRITeC-X EU Horizon 2020 Teaming grant, of which SMMI is an advanced partner. /smmi/news/2022/11/01-exploring-potential-future-ocean-facing-education-collaborations.pageTue, 01 Nov 2022 00:00:00 +0000Professor Ajit Shenoi, retires after 41 years of service to the https://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/ajitshenoi.jpg/smmi/news/2022/10/27-professor-ajit-shenoi-retires.pageProfessor Ajit Shenoi, Lloyd’s Register and Royal Academy of Engineering Research Professor in Lightweight Structures, and founding Director of the Southampton Marine & Maritime Institute (SMMI), retired on the 30 September 2022, marking a significant milestone to the . /smmi/news/2022/10/27-professor-ajit-shenoi-retires.pageFri, 28 Oct 2022 00:00:00 +0100Adjunct Professor Grahaeme Henderson elected Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineeringhttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/grahaeme-henderson.jpg/smmi/news/2022/10/27-professor-grahaeme-henderson-elected-fellow-of-royal-academy-engineering.pageSMMI Adjunct Professor Grahaeme Henderson has been elected Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering. /smmi/news/2022/10/27-professor-grahaeme-henderson-elected-fellow-of-royal-academy-engineering.pageThu, 27 Oct 2022 00:00:00 +0100Success for AUV SMARTY200 in its maiden mission to survey seagrass in Studland Bay https://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/smarty200.jpg/smmi/news/2022/09/05-auv-smarty200.pageThe Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV) SMARTY200 successfully surveyed seagrass distribution in Studland Bay during its maiden mission in July this year. /smmi/news/2022/09/05-auv-smarty200.pageMon, 05 Sep 2022 00:00:00 +0100Autonomous Underwater Vehicle SMARTY200 https://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/AUV.jpg/smmi/news/2022/07/21-auv-smarty200.page/smmi/news/2022/07/21-auv-smarty200.pageThu, 21 Jul 2022 00:00:00 +0100Nature Based Solutions: FELS+SMMI Networking Event https://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/Profs%20Steve%20Darby%20Felix%20Eigenbrod%20and%20Damon%20Teagle.jpg/smmi/news/2022/05/30-nature-based-solutions.page/smmi/news/2022/05/30-nature-based-solutions.pageMon, 30 May 2022 00:00:00 +0100BLEACHED. An immersive exhibition where coral science meets the arts.https://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/Bleached.jpg/smmi/news/2022/05/24-bleached.page/smmi/news/2022/05/24-bleached.pageTue, 24 May 2022 00:00:00 +0100Offshore trials demonstrate capabilities of new autonomous underwater sensor systemshttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/Offshore%20trials.jpg/smmi/news/2022/04/29-offshore-trials-demonstration.pageEngineers and scientists from the and the National Oceanography Centre (NOC) have recently returned from trials of new, state-of-the-art ocean biogeochemical sensors integrated with autonomous vehicles./smmi/news/2022/04/29-offshore-trials-demonstration.pageFri, 29 Apr 2022 00:00:00 +0100Centre of Excellence to help the maritime sector reduce its emissions is soon to launchhttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/Fuel%20ship.jpg/smmi/news/2022/04/27-centre-of-excellence.pageThe Data-centric Engineering for Clean Oceans (DECO) will bring together researchers from a range of disciplines, focused on maximising the benefits of the data being collected in service to decarbonise the maritime sector. It builds on a number of strengths at the to provide immediate reductions in fuel usage across the maritime industry./smmi/news/2022/04/27-centre-of-excellence.pageWed, 27 Apr 2022 00:00:00 +0100SMMI welcomes Tamara Topic to the Maritime Decarbonisation Teamhttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/Tamara%20Topic.jpg/smmi/news/2022/01/24-smmi-welcomes-tamara-topic.page/smmi/news/2022/01/24-smmi-welcomes-tamara-topic.pageMon, 24 Jan 2022 00:00:00 +0000SMMI supports growth of Cyprus sister – CMMIhttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/SMMI%20supporting%20growth.jpg/smmi/news/2022/12/17-smmi-supports-growth-of-cyprus-sister.page/smmi/news/2022/12/17-smmi-supports-growth-of-cyprus-sister.pageFri, 17 Dec 2021 00:00:00 +0000Considerations of the Impact of COP26 on Business and the Greater Solent Regionhttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/comms/SMMI/SMMI_Dec_01.jpg/smmi/news/2021/12/16-impact-cop26-on-business.page/smmi/news/2021/12/16-impact-cop26-on-business.pageThu, 16 Dec 2021 00:00:00 +0000Beyond 1.5 to stay alive: Small Island Developing States and Policy Changehttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/Small%20island.jpg/smmi/news/2021/12/10-small-island-development.page/smmi/news/2021/12/10-small-island-development.pageFri, 10 Dec 2021 00:00:00 +0000Grant Success for news SMMI Research Fellow Dr Sam Robinsonhttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/Grant%20Success.jpg/smmi/news/2021/12/10-grant-success-for-smmi-research-fellow.page/smmi/news/2021/12/10-grant-success-for-smmi-research-fellow.pageFri, 10 Dec 2021 00:00:00 +0000SMMI’s Deputy Director Susan Gourvenec and Policy Fellow Wassim Dbouk in pre-COP26 event ‘Is it too late to save our oceans?’https://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/distinguished-lecture-save-oceans.jpg?/smmi/news/2021/11/18-too-late-to-save-our-oceans.page/smmi/news/2021/11/18-too-late-to-save-our-oceans.pageThu, 18 Nov 2021 00:00:00 +0000SMMI researchers launch voyage optimisation solution to reduce ship emissionshttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/smmi/smmi-voyage-optimisation-solution.png/smmi/news/2021/11/18-smmi-researchers-launch-voyage-optimisation-solution.page/smmi/news/2021/11/18-smmi-researchers-launch-voyage-optimisation-solution.pageThu, 18 Nov 2021 00:00:00 +0000The present at COP26https://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/img/comms/SMMI/Soton_cop26_1a.jpg/smmi/news/2021/11/13-university-of-southampton-at-cop26.page /smmi/news/2021/11/13-university-of-southampton-at-cop26.pageSat, 13 Nov 2021 00:00:00 +0000SMMI experts to tackle maritime decarbonisationhttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/~assets/img/comms/test/smmi-news-oct-4.jpg/smmi/news/2021/10/04-smmi-experts-tackle-maritime-decarbonisation.pageResearchers at the will work on four winning projects from the Department for Transport’s Clean Maritime Demonstrator Competition announced by Secretary of State for Transport Rt. Hon Grant Shapps./smmi/news/2021/10/04-smmi-experts-tackle-maritime-decarbonisation.pageMon, 04 Oct 2021 00:00:00 +0100The Environment Bill’s policy statement on environmental principles: a golden opportunity for a principled framework for the sustainable management of UK watershttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/assets/imported/transforms/site/news-release/PageThumbnail/2D0D397547BD43759AE722550B5A09CD/Environmental_principles_3.jpg_SIA_JPG_fit_to_width_INLINE.jpg/smmi/news/2021/07/24-environment-bills-policy-statement.page/smmi/news/2021/07/24-environment-bills-policy-statement.pageSat, 24 Jul 2021 00:00:00 +0100From the Mantle to Mountains – Just add Waterhttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/smmi/news/2021/06/25-from-mantle-to-mountains.pageThe Troodos Mountains of Cyprus are iconic to geologists. It was here in the 50’s and 60’s that the great British geologist Ian Gass recognised that the particular suite of “ophiolite” rocks preserved in the Troodos mountains formed at an ocean spreading ridge and preserve on-land an ancient slice of ocean crust and upper mantle. These were key observations in the development of plate tectonic theory. Subsequently generations of Earth Science students, particularly from the UK, have inspected the rocks and sediments exposed in Cyprus as an essential pilgrimage during their geological training. However, to date, there has been no quantitative mechanistic explanation of why the deepest mantle rocks crop out at the top of the Troodos mountains, almost 2000m above sea level, while shallower forming rocks are exposed at progressively lower altitudes./smmi/news/2021/06/25-from-mantle-to-mountains.pageFri, 25 Jun 2021 00:00:00 +0100Southampton ranked top for publications related to Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 14: Life Below Waterhttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/assets/imported/transforms/site/news-release/PageThumbnail/1C53EBC268874B199E75ECD31CE808D6/life below water.jpg_SIA_JPG_fit_to_width_INLINE.jpg/smmi/news/2021/06/17-life-below-water-publication.pageThe is ranked first in the UK for the volume of publications related to SDG 14 (2015-2021) with nearly 1000 captured on SciVal. /smmi/news/2021/06/17-life-below-water-publication.pageThu, 17 Jun 2021 00:00:00 +0100Optimising high voltage underwater cable design to support growing use of renewable energyhttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/assets/imported/transforms/site/news-release/PageThumbnail/C976D5832A5C44AE9061C166D5602B2B/wind farm.jpg_SIA_JPG_fit_to_width_INLINE.jpg/smmi/news/2021/05/optimising-high-voltage-underwater-cables.pagePioneering research and consultancy at the is optimising the design of high voltage underwater cables that deliver renewable energy to our shores./smmi/news/2021/05/optimising-high-voltage-underwater-cables.pageMon, 24 May 2021 00:00:00 +0100Dr Roz Coggon wins award for her development of a 30-year future plan for scientific ocean drillinghttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/assets/imported/transforms/site/news-release/PageThumbnail/65CBD0FF209C42E4B93FBD6EB87744F5/roz-coggon3.jpg_SIA_JPG_fit_to_width_INLINE.jpg/smmi/news/2021/05/24-dr-roz-coggon-awarded-the-ecord-award.page Royal Society University Research Fellow Dr Roz Coggon, based in the School of Ocean & Earth Science, has recently been awarded the European Consortium for Ocean Research Drilling – ECORD Award for her leadership of a 30 year plan to guide future ocean research drilling./smmi/news/2021/05/24-dr-roz-coggon-awarded-the-ecord-award.pageMon, 24 May 2021 00:00:00 +0100Southampton welcomes Richard Westgarth to the SMMI teamhttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/assets/imported/transforms/site/news-release/PageThumbnail/13D9A4CBD51247E1959DF675A062BEDA/Richard Westgarth.jpg_SIA_JPG_fit_to_width_INLINE.jpg/smmi/news/2021/03/smmi-welcomes-richard-westgarth.page/smmi/news/2021/03/smmi-welcomes-richard-westgarth.pageFri, 26 Mar 2021 00:00:00 +0000SMMI researcher Dr Wassim Dbouk joins Commonwealth partnership of rising stars to accelerate climate actionhttps://cdn.southampton.ac.uk/assets/imported/transforms/site/news-release/PageThumbnail/99EE52FECD5048BF8FFD0ACCAE64E434/Wassim Dbouk.jpg_SIA_JPG_fit_to_width_INLINE.jpg/smmi/news/2021/03/25-research-joins-commonwelath-partnership.page/smmi/news/2021/03/25-research-joins-commonwelath-partnership.pageThu, 25 Mar 2021 00:00:00 +0000Droplet in the ocean: Three Minute Thesis success

Droplet in the ocean: Three Minute Thesis success

Mon, 01 Jul 2024 00:00:00 +0000<p>Molly Phillips&comma; a second-year SMMI PhD student&comma; won the People&#39;s Choice at the prestigious Three Minute Thesis (3MT) competition. Molly represented Engineering at the university final&comma; after winning the FEPS heat earlier this month. Her presentation&comma; focusing on the development of a high-frequency sensor to measure ocean alkalinity&comma; was up against presentations from other faculties at the Doctoral College Day on 25 June 2024.</p> <p>The 3MT competition challenges PhD students to present their research in just 3 minutes&comma; making complex topics accessible and engaging to a broad audience. Molly&rsquo;s presentation highlighted the negative impacts of ocean acidification and her novel solution using droplet microfluidics to create a faster&comma; more accurate sensor. This technology could revolutionise the way scientists measure and understand ocean health&comma; offering critical insights into mitigating the effects of climate change.</p> <p>&ldquo;I found 3MT a great opportunity to reflect on the novel aspects of my PhD&comma; communicating how my research benefits my scientific community&comma; and how it can make a difference outside of research&comma; benefitting our planet&comma;&rdquo; Molly said. &ldquo;This was also a fun way to engage friends and family in my research.&rdquo;</p> <p>Molly&rsquo;s research addresses the pressing need for improved monitoring of ocean alkalinity in highly variable regions&comma; the buffering capacity of the ocean against increasing acidity. By using droplet microfluidics&comma; her sensor can provide rapid measurements&comma; essential for understanding and protecting marine ecosystems.</p> <p>The 3MT competition is an excellent platform for researchers to showcase their work and its broader impact. Molly&rsquo;s success in the 3MT competition highlights the importance of interdisciplinary research and its role in addressing global challenges.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> Molly Phillips&amp;comma; a second-year SMMI PhD student&amp;comma; won the People’s Choice at the prestigious Three Minute Thesis (3MT) competition. https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/3mt_static_slide-(3).pnghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/3mt_static_slide-(3).pngSchematic diagram representing the droplet sensorschoolsandcolleges/news/schoolsandcolleges/news/2024/07/droplet_in_the_ocean_three_minute_thesis_success.page/schoolsandcolleges/news/2024/07/droplet_in_the_ocean_three_minute_thesis_success.pageDroplet in the ocean: Three Minute Thesis success

Droplet in the ocean: Three Minute Thesis success

Mon, 01 Jul 2024 00:00:00 +0000<p>Molly Phillips&comma; a second-year SMMI PhD student&comma; won the People&#39;s Choice at the prestigious Three Minute Thesis (3MT) competition. Molly represented Engineering at the university final&comma; after winning the FEPS heat earlier this month. Her presentation&comma; focusing on the development of a high-frequency sensor to measure ocean alkalinity&comma; was up against presentations from other faculties at the Doctoral College Day on 25 June 2024.</p> <p>The 3MT competition challenges PhD students to present their research in just 3 minutes&comma; making complex topics accessible and engaging to a broad audience. Molly&rsquo;s presentation highlighted the negative impacts of ocean acidification and her novel solution using droplet microfluidics to create a faster&comma; more accurate sensor. This technology could revolutionise the way scientists measure and understand ocean health&comma; offering critical insights into mitigating the effects of climate change.</p> <p>&ldquo;I found 3MT a great opportunity to reflect on the novel aspects of my PhD&comma; communicating how my research benefits my scientific community&comma; and how it can make a difference outside of research&comma; benefitting our planet&comma;&rdquo; Molly said. &ldquo;This was also a fun way to engage friends and family in my research.&rdquo;</p> <p>Molly&rsquo;s research addresses the pressing need for improved monitoring of ocean alkalinity in highly variable regions&comma; the buffering capacity of the ocean against increasing acidity. By using droplet microfluidics&comma; her sensor can provide rapid measurements&comma; essential for understanding and protecting marine ecosystems.</p> <p>The 3MT competition is an excellent platform for researchers to showcase their work and its broader impact. Molly&rsquo;s success in the 3MT competition highlights the importance of interdisciplinary research and its role in addressing global challenges.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> Molly Phillips&amp;comma; a second-year SMMI PhD student&amp;comma; won the People’s Choice at the prestigious Three Minute Thesis (3MT) competition. https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/3mt_static_slide-(3).pnghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/3mt_static_slide-(3).pngSchematic diagram representing the droplet sensorschoolsandcolleges/news/schoolsandcolleges/news/2024/07/droplet_in_the_ocean_three_minute_thesis_success.page/schoolsandcolleges/news/2024/07/droplet_in_the_ocean_three_minute_thesis_success.page
Droplet in the ocean: Three Minute Thesis success

Droplet in the ocean: Three Minute Thesis success

Mon, 01 Jul 2024 00:00:00 +0000 <p>Molly Phillips&comma; a second-year SMMI PhD student&comma; won the People&#39;s Choice at the prestigious Three Minute Thesis (3MT) competition. Molly represented Engineering at the university final&comma; after winning the FEPS heat earlier this month. Her presentation&comma; focusing on the development of a high-frequency sensor to measure ocean alkalinity&comma; was up against presentations from other faculties at the Doctoral College Day on 25 June 2024.</p> <p>The 3MT competition challenges PhD students to present their research in just 3 minutes&comma; making complex topics accessible and engaging to a broad audience. Molly&rsquo;s presentation highlighted the negative impacts of ocean acidification and her novel solution using droplet microfluidics to create a faster&comma; more accurate sensor. This technology could revolutionise the way scientists measure and understand ocean health&comma; offering critical insights into mitigating the effects of climate change.</p> <p>&ldquo;I found 3MT a great opportunity to reflect on the novel aspects of my PhD&comma; communicating how my research benefits my scientific community&comma; and how it can make a difference outside of research&comma; benefitting our planet&comma;&rdquo; Molly said. &ldquo;This was also a fun way to engage friends and family in my research.&rdquo;</p> <p>Molly&rsquo;s research addresses the pressing need for improved monitoring of ocean alkalinity in highly variable regions&comma; the buffering capacity of the ocean against increasing acidity. By using droplet microfluidics&comma; her sensor can provide rapid measurements&comma; essential for understanding and protecting marine ecosystems.</p> <p>The 3MT competition is an excellent platform for researchers to showcase their work and its broader impact. Molly&rsquo;s success in the 3MT competition highlights the importance of interdisciplinary research and its role in addressing global challenges.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> Molly Phillips&amp;comma; a second-year SMMI PhD student&amp;comma; won the People’s Choice at the prestigious Three Minute Thesis (3MT) competition. https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/3mt_static_slide-(3).pnghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/3mt_static_slide-(3).pngSchematic diagram representing the droplet sensorsmmi/news/smmi/news/2024/07/droplet_in_the_ocean_three_minute_thesis_success.page/smmi/news/2024/07/droplet_in_the_ocean_three_minute_thesis_success.pageDroplet in the ocean: Three Minute Thesis success

Droplet in the ocean: Three Minute Thesis success

Mon, 01 Jul 2024 00:00:00 +0000 <p>Molly Phillips&comma; a second-year SMMI PhD student&comma; won the People&#39;s Choice at the prestigious Three Minute Thesis (3MT) competition. Molly represented Engineering at the university final&comma; after winning the FEPS heat earlier this month. Her presentation&comma; focusing on the development of a high-frequency sensor to measure ocean alkalinity&comma; was up against presentations from other faculties at the Doctoral College Day on 25 June 2024.</p> <p>The 3MT competition challenges PhD students to present their research in just 3 minutes&comma; making complex topics accessible and engaging to a broad audience. Molly&rsquo;s presentation highlighted the negative impacts of ocean acidification and her novel solution using droplet microfluidics to create a faster&comma; more accurate sensor. This technology could revolutionise the way scientists measure and understand ocean health&comma; offering critical insights into mitigating the effects of climate change.</p> <p>&ldquo;I found 3MT a great opportunity to reflect on the novel aspects of my PhD&comma; communicating how my research benefits my scientific community&comma; and how it can make a difference outside of research&comma; benefitting our planet&comma;&rdquo; Molly said. &ldquo;This was also a fun way to engage friends and family in my research.&rdquo;</p> <p>Molly&rsquo;s research addresses the pressing need for improved monitoring of ocean alkalinity in highly variable regions&comma; the buffering capacity of the ocean against increasing acidity. By using droplet microfluidics&comma; her sensor can provide rapid measurements&comma; essential for understanding and protecting marine ecosystems.</p> <p>The 3MT competition is an excellent platform for researchers to showcase their work and its broader impact. Molly&rsquo;s success in the 3MT competition highlights the importance of interdisciplinary research and its role in addressing global challenges.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> Molly Phillips&amp;comma; a second-year SMMI PhD student&amp;comma; won the People’s Choice at the prestigious Three Minute Thesis (3MT) competition. https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/3mt_static_slide-(3).pnghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/3mt_static_slide-(3).pngSchematic diagram representing the droplet sensorsmmi/news/smmi/news/2024/07/droplet_in_the_ocean_three_minute_thesis_success.page/smmi/news/2024/07/droplet_in_the_ocean_three_minute_thesis_success.page
Droplet in the ocean: Three Minute Thesis success

Droplet in the ocean: Three Minute Thesis success

Mon, 01 Jul 2024 00:00:00 +0000 <p>Molly represented Engineering at the university final&comma; after winning the FEPS heat earlier this month. Her presentation&comma; focusing on the development of a high-frequency sensor to measure ocean alkalinity&comma; was up against presentations from other faculties at the Doctoral College Day on 25 June 2024.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&quot;The 3MT competition challenges PhD students to present their research in just 3 minutes&comma; making complex topics accessible and engaging to a broad audience. Molly&#39;s presentation highlighted the negative impacts of ocean acidification and her novel solution using droplet microfluidics to create a faster&comma; more accurate sensor. This technology could revolutionise the way scientists measure and understand ocean health&comma; offering critical insights into mitigating the effects of climate change. I found 3MT a great opportunity to reflect on the novel aspects of my PhD&comma; communicating how my research benefits my scientific community&comma; and how it can make a difference outside of research&comma; benefitting our planet&comma;&quot; Molly said. &quot;This was also a fun way to engage friends and family in my research.&quot;</p> <p>Molly&#39;s research addresses the pressing need for improved monitoring of ocean alkalinity in highly variable regions&comma; the buffering capacity of the ocean against increasing acidity. By using droplet microfluidics&comma; her sensor can provide rapid measurements&comma; essential for understanding and protecting marine ecosystems.</p> <p>The 3MT competition is an excellent platform for researchers to showcase their work and its broader impact. Molly&#39;s success in the 3MT competition highlights the importance of interdisciplinary research and its role in addressing global challenges.</p> Molly Phillips&amp;comma; a second-year SMMI PhD student&amp;comma; won the People’s Choice at the prestigious Three Minute Thesis (3MT) competition.https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/presentation_of_3-minute_thesis_success_to_molly_phillips-(1).jpghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/3mt_static_slide-(3).pngMolly Phillips receiving her 3 minute success certificate smmi/news/smmi/news/2024/07/droplet-in-the-ocean-three-minute-thesis-success.page/smmi/news/2024/07/droplet-in-the-ocean-three-minute-thesis-success.pageDroplet in the ocean: Three Minute Thesis success

Droplet in the ocean: Three Minute Thesis success

Mon, 01 Jul 2024 00:00:00 +0000 <p>Molly represented Engineering at the university final&comma; after winning the FEPS heat earlier this month. Her presentation&comma; focusing on the development of a high-frequency sensor to measure ocean alkalinity&comma; was up against presentations from other faculties at the Doctoral College Day on 25 June 2024.</p> <p>&quot;The 3MT competition challenges PhD students to present their research in just 3 minutes&comma; making complex topics accessible and engaging to a broad audience. Molly&#39;s presentation highlighted the negative impacts of ocean acidification and her novel solution using droplet microfluidics to create a faster&comma; more accurate sensor. This technology could revolutionise the way scientists measure and understand ocean health&comma; offering critical insights into mitigating the effects of climate change. I found 3MT a great opportunity to reflect on the novel aspects of my PhD&comma; communicating how my research benefits my scientific community&comma; and how it can make a difference outside of research&comma; benefitting our planet&comma;&quot; Molly said. &quot;This was also a fun way to engage friends and family in my research.&quot;</p> <p>Molly&#39;s research addresses the pressing need for improved monitoring of ocean alkalinity in highly variable regions&comma; the buffering capacity of the ocean against increasing acidity. By using droplet microfluidics&comma; her sensor can provide rapid measurements&comma; essential for understanding and protecting marine ecosystems.</p> <p>The 3MT competition is an excellent platform for researchers to showcase their work and its broader impact. Molly&#39;s success in the 3MT competition highlights the importance of interdisciplinary research and its role in addressing global challenges.</p> Molly Phillips&amp;comma; a second-year SMMI PhD student&amp;comma; won the People’s Choice at the prestigious Three Minute Thesis (3MT) competition. https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/3mt_static_slide-(3).pnghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/3mt_static_slide-(3).pngSchematic diagram representing the droplet sensorsmmi/news/smmi/news/2024/07/droplet-in-the-ocean-three-minute-thesis-success.page/smmi/news/2024/07/droplet-in-the-ocean-three-minute-thesis-success.page<p>&nbsp;</p> <img alt='' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/molly_phillips_at_3-minute_thesis_competition_2024.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 638px;' /> <p>Molly Phillips at the 3-minute thesis competition 2024</p> Molly Phillips receiving her 3 minute success certificate
Thalassa 2024: Marine Science conference&amp;comma; Larnaca&amp;comma; Cyprus

Thalassa 2024: Marine Science conference&amp;comma; Larnaca&amp;comma; Cyprus

Thu, 04 Jul 2024 00:00:00 +0000 <p><a href='https://www.cmmi.blue/thalassa-2024/'>Thalassa 2024</a> was organised by the <a href='https://www.cmmi.blue/'>Cyprus Marine and Maritime Institute (CMMI)</a>&comma; Maritime Institute of Eastern Mediterranean and Emerge.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>This second biannual regional conference brought together marine experts and stakeholders from academic&comma; research institutes&comma; industry&comma; NGO&comma; and the public sectors. Their insight can be implemented to tackle current ocean hot topics in the regional context. These cover a wide range of marine science topics from Marine Biotechnology and Aquaculture&comma; Marine and Coastal Governance&comma; Oceanography&comma; Maritime Cultural Heritage&comma; to Marine and Coastal ecology.</p> <p>Day 1 of the conference was opened by Andreas Vyras&comma; Mayor of Larnaca and Zacharias Siokouros&comma; the Director of CMMI. Speaker sessions covered Marine and Coastal Ecology and Marine and Coastal Governance. Each session began with a keynote speaker followed by a diverse range of other speakers on the topic. Cedric Muscat&comma; a graduate from Civil&comma; Maritime&comma; and Environmental Engineering&comma; <a href='/iroe/index.page'>Intelligent and Resilient Ocean Engineering</a> represented the . Cedric presented&nbsp;his work on Finding space for offshore wind in Malta through GIS analysis. <a href='/~assets/doc/smmi/Thalassa%20Presentation%20final-Cedric.pptx'>Download Cedric&#39;s presentation</a>. The day closed with a poster session&comma; a virtual reality demo of a virtual dive site MUSAN underwater museum near Ayia Napa and the wreck Kyrenia. This was followed by a social gathering.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><img alt='' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/day-1-conference.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 361px; float: left;' /></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Cedric Muscat presenting in the Marine and Coastal Governance session</p> <p><a href='/people/5y5sm5/doctor-felix-pedrotti'>Dr Felix Pedrotti</a> from SMMI Centre for Maritime Archaeology was out in the marina testing the use of small ROVs to survey marina structures and visually inspect ships for damage and biofouling (sea life accumulation on hulls and propellers). This fieldwork&comma; in partnership with the CMMI&#39;s <a href='https://www.cmmi.blue/the-marine-robotics-innovation-centre/'>Marine Robotics Innovation Centre (MaRIC)</a>&comma; is crucial for enhancing capacity to offer these services to marinas and to understand the improvements needed for higher quality results.</p> <p><img alt='' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/thalassa-rov-testing.png' style='width: 600px; height: 266px; float: left;' /></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>SMMI and CMMI surveying boat and marine structures using ROVs</p> <p>Day 2 had sessions on Marine Biotechnology &amp; Aquaculture&comma; Oceanography and Marine Cultural Heritage. A highlight was the insightful presentation session featuring the &#39;s <a href='/research/institutes-centres/centre-for-maritime-archaeology'>Maritime Archaeology</a> team. Presenters included <a href='/people/5y5hvw/doctor-alexandra-karamitrou'>Dr Alexandra Karamitrou</a>&comma; Dr Felix Pedrotti&comma; <a href='/people/5wy6jb/professor-lucy-blue'>Professor Lucy Blue</a>&comma; <a href='https://honorfrostfoundation.org/2023/11/23/celia-prescott-decie-2022-ongoing/'>Celia Prescott</a>&comma; and <a href='/people/5xkdbf/doctor-crystal-el-safadi'>Dr Crystal El Safadi</a>. They covered topics of the importance of digitalisation (photogrammetry) and databasing of maritime archaeological sites and assets&comma; using AI to identify maritime heritage assets&comma; and assessing the impact of climate change on maritime heritage assets&comma; that are applicable in Mediterranean and globally.</p> <p>Dr. Louis Hadjioannou&comma; Chief committee member of Thalassa 2024&comma; closed the conference. There was a final poster session&comma; and coffee at CMMI house.</p> <p><img alt='Virtual dive demonstration' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/virtual-dive-demo.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 361px; float: left;' /></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><br type='_moz' /> &nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Cedric and Lucy participating in the MUSAN virtual dive demo</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> academics participated at the Thalassa Marine Science conference at the end of May.https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/thalassa-2024.pnghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/thalassa-2024.pngThalassa 2024 logosmmi/news/smmi/news/2024/07/thalassa-2024-marine-science-conference-larnaca-cyprus.page/smmi/news/2024/07/thalassa-2024-marine-science-conference-larnaca-cyprus.pageThalassa 2024: Marine Science conference&amp;comma; Larnaca&amp;comma; Cyprus

Thalassa 2024: Marine Science conference&amp;comma; Larnaca&amp;comma; Cyprus

Thu, 04 Jul 2024 00:00:00 +0000 <p>Thalassa 2024 was organised by the Cyprus Marine and Maritime Institute (CMMI)&comma; Maritime Institute of Eastern Mediterranean and Emerge.</p> <p>This second biannual regional conference brought together marine experts and stakeholders from academic&comma; research institutes&comma; industry&comma; NGO&comma; and the public sectors. Their insight can be implemented to tackle current ocean hot topics in the regional context. These cover a wide range of marine science topics from Marine Biotechnology and Aquaculture&comma; Marine and Coastal Governance&comma; Oceanography&comma; Maritime Cultural Heritage&comma; to Marine and Coastal ecology.</p> <p><img alt='' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/day-1-conference.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 361px; float: right;' /></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Day 1 of the conference was opened by Andreas Vyras&comma; Mayor of Larnaca and Zacharias Siokouros&comma; the Director of CMMI. Speaker sessions covered Marine and Coastal Ecology and Marine and Coastal Governance. Each session began with a keynote speaker followed by a diverse range of other speakers on the topic. Cedric Muscat&comma; a graduate from Civil&comma; Maritime&comma; and Environmental Engineering&comma; Intelligent and Resilient Ocean Engineering represented the . Cedric presented&nbsp;his work on Finding space for offshore wind in Malta through GIS analysis. The day closed with a poster session&comma; a virtual reality demo of a virtual dive site MUSAN underwater museum near Ayia Napa and the wreck Kyrenia. This was followed by a social gathering.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><img alt='' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/thalassa-rov-testing.png' style='width: 600px; height: 266px; float: left;' /></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Dr Felix Pedrotti from SMMI Centre for Maritime Archaeology was out in the marina testing the use of small ROVs to survey&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; marina structures and visually inspect ships for damage and biofouling (sea life accumulation on hulls and propellers). This&nbsp;&nbsp; fieldwork&comma; in partnership with the CMMI&#39;s Marine Robotics Innovation Centre (MaRIC)&comma; is crucial for enhancing capacity to offer these services to marinas and to understand the improvements needed for higher quality results.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>SMMI and CMMI surveying boat and marine structures using ROV&#39;s</p> <p><img alt='Virtual dive demonstration' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/virtual-dive-demo.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 361px; float: right;' /></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Day 2 had sessions on Marine Biotechnology &amp; Aquaculture&comma; Oceanography and Marine Cultural Heritage. A highlight was the insightful presentation session featuring the &#39;s Maritime Archaeology team. Presenters included Dr Alexandra Karamitrou&comma; Dr Felix Pedrotti&comma; Professor Lucy Blue&comma; Celia Prescott&comma; and Dr Crystal El Safadi. They covered topics of the importance of digitalisation (photogrammetry) and databasing of maritime archaeological sites and assets&comma; using AI to identify maritime heritage assets&comma; and assessing the impact of climate change on maritime heritage assets&comma; that are applicable in Mediterranean and globally.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Dr. Louis Hadjioannou&comma; Chief committee member of Thalassa 2024&comma; closed the conference. There was a final poster session&comma; and coffee at CMMI house.</p> academics participated at the Thalassa Marine Science conference at the end of May.https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/thalassa-2024.pnghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/thalassa-2024.pngThalassa 2024 logosmmi/news/smmi/news/2024/07/thalassa-2024-marine-science-conference-larnaca-cyprus.page/smmi/news/2024/07/thalassa-2024-marine-science-conference-larnaca-cyprus.page
crucial role of co2 decarbonisation

Award-winning study by highlights the crucial role of CO2 shipping in achieving decarbonisation goals

Wed, 10 Jul 2024 08:00:00 +0000 <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Recently&comma; <a href='/people/62dtdx/doctor-seyedvahid-vakili'>Dr. Seyedvahid Vakili</a> and colleagues led a study titled &quot;Optimising Life Cycle Costs of Carbon Capture and Storage: Insights for Shipping CO2 from the Solent Region&comma;&quot; which won the best paper award at the International Association of Maritime Economist (IAME) 2024 Conference in Valencia&comma; Spain.</p> <p>The study recognises the importance of CO2 shipping&comma; particularly for industrial clusters lacking access to geo-storage areas or situated far from suitable sites. It offers a techno-economic and environmental framework to facilitate the transportation of captured CO2 from clusters to appropriate geo-storage locations. The awarded paper assesses the Life Cycle Cost (LCC) for CO2 shipping and proposes carbon pricing strategies for different LCO2 shipping options. These strategies aim to enhance the competitiveness of CCUS compared to other emission mitigation measures.</p> <p>Capt. Seyedvahid Vakili&comma; a Research Fellow in Sustainability&comma; Energy&comma; and Net Zero Emissions in Maritime Industries&comma; and part of the Southampton Marine and Maritime Institute (SMMI)&comma; explains: &quot;CCUS technology can play an important role in meeting the Paris Agreement goals and transitioning to zero-emissions industries. Considering the value chain of the process&comma; Liquid CO2 shipping is expected to play a crucial role in facilitating and expanding the utilisation of this technology. However&comma; decision-makers need to be supported with appropriate decision-making tools&comma; such as techno-economic and environmental frameworks and results. Our study aims to provide these necessary tools to aid decision-makers and policymakers in the effective implementation and expansion of CCUS. The recognition at the IAME 2024 Conference highlights the significance of this research in advancing sustainable practices in the maritime industry and supports the broader goals of global decarbonisation efforts.&quot;</p> <p><span aria-hidden='false' aria-labelledby='section_tab.991f88d20a00064127420bc37824d385' class='tabs2_section tabs2_section_1 tabs2_section1' data-header-only='false' data-section-id='991f88d20a00064127420bc37824d385' id='section_tab.991f88d20a00064127420bc37824d385' role='tabpanel' style='display: block;' tab_caption='Notes' tab_caption_raw='Notes'><span class='section sn-stream-section' data-header-only='false' id='section-991f88d20a00064127420bc37824d385'><span class='sn-widget-textblock-body sn-widget-textblock-body_formatted'><a href='/people/5wyg6q/professor-stephen-turnock'>Professor Stephen Turnock</a>&comma; <a href='/people/5wynfy/professor-damon-teagle'>Professor Damon Teagle</a>&comma; <a href='/people/5x8mrs/doctor-lindsay-marie-armstrong'>Associate Professor Dr. Lindsay-Marie Armstrong</a>&comma; and <a href='/people/5z8tpn/mr-panos-manias'>Eng. Panos Manias</a> were part of the team that contributed to writing the paper. </span></span></span></p> Carbon Capture Utilisation and Storage (CCUS) plays a crucial role in decarbonisation efforts and in meeting the objectives outlined in the Paris Agreement. Within the CCUS value chain&amp;comma; CO2 shipping serves as a key component. https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/dr_seyedvahid_vakili-(2).jpghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/dr_seyedvahid_vakili-(1).jpgDr Seyedvahid Vakili Dr Seyedvahid Vakili holding his certificateDr Seyedvahid Vakili smmi/news/smmi/news/2024/07/crucial-role-of-co2-decarbonisation.page/smmi/news/2024/07/crucial-role-of-co2-decarbonisation.pagecrucial role of co2 decarbonisation

Award-winning study by highlights the crucial role of CO2 shipping in achieving decarbonisation goals

Wed, 10 Jul 2024 08:00:00 +0000 <p>Recently&comma; <a href='/people/62dtdx/doctor-seyedvahid-vakili'>Dr. Seyedvahid Vakili</a> and colleagues led a study titled &quot;Optimising Life Cycle Costs of Carbon Capture and Storage: Insights for Shipping CO2 from the Solent Region&comma;&quot; which won the best paper award at the International Association of Maritime Economist (IAME) 2024 Conference in Valencia&comma; Spain.</p> <p>The study recognises the importance of CO2 shipping&comma; particularly for industrial clusters lacking access to geo-storage areas or situated far from suitable sites. It offers a techno-economic and environmental framework to facilitate the transportation of captured CO2 from clusters to appropriate geo-storage locations. The awarded paper assesses the Life Cycle Cost (LCC) for CO2 shipping and proposes carbon pricing strategies for different LCO2 shipping options. These strategies aim to enhance the competitiveness of CCUS compared to other emission mitigation measures.</p> <p>Capt. Seyedvahid Vakili&comma; a Research Fellow in Sustainability&comma; Energy&comma; and Net Zero Emissions in Maritime Industries&comma; and part of the Southampton Marine and Maritime Institute (SMMI)&comma; explains: &quot;CCUS technology can play an important role in meeting the Paris Agreement goals and transitioning to zero-emissions industries. Considering the value chain of the process&comma; Liquid CO2 shipping is expected to play a crucial role in facilitating and expanding the utilisation of this technology. However&comma; decision-makers need to be supported with appropriate decision-making tools&comma; such as techno-economic and environmental frameworks and results. Our study aims to provide these necessary tools to aid decision-makers and policymakers in the effective implementation and expansion of CCUS. The recognition at the IAME 2024 Conference highlights the significance of this research in advancing sustainable practices in the maritime industry and supports the broader goals of global decarbonisation efforts.&quot;</p> Carbon Capture Utilisation and Storage (CCUS) plays a crucial role in decarbonisation efforts and in meeting the objectives outlined in the Paris Agreement. Within the CCUS value chain&amp;comma; CO2 shipping serves as a key component. https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/dr_seyedvahid_vakili-(1).jpghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/dr_seyedvahid_vakili-(1).jpgDr Seyedvahid Vakili Dr Seyedvahid Vakili holding his certificateDr Seyedvahid Vakili smmi/news/smmi/news/2024/07/crucial-role-of-co2-decarbonisation.page/smmi/news/2024/07/crucial-role-of-co2-decarbonisation.page <p><img alt='Dr Seyedvahid Vakili receiving his certificate next to the IAME 2024 conference banners' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/seyedvahid-vakili-receiving-certificate.png' style='width: 480px; height: 319px;' /></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Dr Seyedvahid Vakili receiving his certificate at the IAME 2024 conference.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>
Transforming sargassum monitoring

Transforming sargassum monitoring through community and technology (SarTECH)

Wed, 10 Jul 2024 08:00:00 +0000 <p>Our project &quot;Interactive Community Engagement Using Technology and Citizen Science for School and Community Capacity Building on Pelagic Sargassum in Mexico&quot; (SarTECH) is funded by the SMMI. Led by Dr Victoria Dominguez Almela&comma; the aim is to initiate community level monitoring and management of the seaweed. Our journey has been marked by significant milestones and an inspiring expansion of our community engagement efforts. &nbsp;</p> <h3>Enhancing monitoring with cutting-edge technology</h3> <p>When we first envisioned SarTECH&comma; our goal was to deploy a handful of low-cost cameras to monitor the sargassum that affects the Mexican coastlines. We surpass our original goal by installing six cameras&comma; two more than planned! We also broadened our reach to include locations in Jamaica and Ghana&comma; supported by the ESRC funded <a href='https://www.sartrac.org/'>SARTRAC</a>. These cameras&comma; designed and engineered with the expertise of the Institute of Engineering of UNAM and PhD talents of Jose Antonio Lopez Portillo&comma; offer hourly data (detailed overhead views of beached and nearshore sargassum) that help us quantify sargassum distribution effectively. Thanks to advanced algorithms&comma; these images are transformed into a bird&#39;s eye view&comma; making every pixel visible for sargassum tracking. Furthermore&comma; a new PAPIIT grant won by colleagues in Mexico with Dr Dominguez (Support Programme for Research and Innovation Projects in Mexico) allowed the team to install a meteorological station and acoustic doppler current profiler to record data on winds and currents. This data provides a cornerstone for developing a robust early warning system that will benefit entire communities.</p> <p><img alt='Team members standing by information boards on the coast' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-sargassum-monitoring-points.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 231px;' /></p> <p><img alt='' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-unam-uos-teams.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 165px;' /></p> <p><img alt='' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-newspaper-article.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 378px;' /></p> Pelagic sargassum seaweed has proliferated throughout the tropical Atlantic Ocean&amp;comma; causing immense damage to coastal communities from Mexico to Ghana since 2011https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-sargassum-monitoring.jpghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-sargassum-monitoring.jpgA split image showing 3 team members posing with the cameras and a diver positioning the camera on the sea bedsmmi/news/smmi/news/2024/07/transforming-sargassum-monitoring.page/smmi/news/2024/07/transforming-sargassum-monitoring.pageTransforming sargassum monitoring

Transforming sargassum monitoring through community and technology (SarTECH)

Wed, 10 Jul 2024 08:00:00 +0000 <p>Our project &quot;Interactive Community Engagement Using Technology and Citizen Science for School and Community Capacity Building on Pelagic Sargassum in Mexico&quot; (SarTECH) is funded by the SMMI. Led by Dr Victoria Dominguez Almela&comma; the aim is to initiate community level monitoring and management of the seaweed. Our journey has been marked by significant milestones and an inspiring expansion of our community engagement efforts. &nbsp;</p> <h3>Enhancing monitoring with cutting-edge technology</h3> <p>When we first envisioned SarTECH&comma; our goal was to deploy a handful of low-cost cameras to monitor the sargassum that affects the Mexican coastlines. We surpass our original goal by installing six cameras&comma; two more than planned! We also broadened our reach to include locations in Jamaica and Ghana&comma; supported by the ESRC funded <a href='https://www.sartrac.org/'>SARTRAC</a>. These cameras&comma; designed and engineered with the expertise of the Institute of Engineering of UNAM and PhD talents of Jose Antonio Lopez Portillo&comma; offer hourly data (detailed overhead views of beached and nearshore sargassum) that help us quantify sargassum distribution effectively. Thanks to advanced algorithms&comma; these images are transformed into a bird&#39;s eye view&comma; making every pixel visible for sargassum tracking. Furthermore&comma; a new PAPIIT grant won by colleagues in Mexico with Dr Dominguez (Support Programme for Research and Innovation Projects in Mexico) allowed the team to install a meteorological station and acoustic doppler current profiler to record data on winds and currents. This data provides a cornerstone for developing a robust early warning system that will benefit entire communities.</p> <p><img alt='Team members standing by information boards on the coast' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-sargassum-monitoring-points.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 231px;' /></p> <p><img alt='' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-unam-uos-teams.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 165px;' /></p> <p><img alt='' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-newspaper-article.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 378px;' /></p> Pelagic sargassum seaweed has proliferated throughout the tropical Atlantic Ocean&amp;comma; causing immense damage to coastal communities from Mexico to Ghana since 2011https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-sargassum-monitoring.jpghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-sargassum-monitoring.jpgA split image showing 3 team members posing with the cameras and a diver positioning the camera on the sea bedsmmi/news/smmi/news/2024/07/transforming-sargassum-monitoring.page/smmi/news/2024/07/transforming-sargassum-monitoring.page
Transforming sargassum monitoring

Transforming sargassum monitoring through community and technology (SarTECH)

Thu, 09 May 2024 08:00:00 +0000 <p>Our project &quot;Interactive Community Engagement Using Technology and Citizen Science for School and Community Capacity Building on Pelagic Sargassum in Mexico&quot; (SarTECH) is funded by the SMMI. Led by Dr Victoria Dominguez Almela&comma; the aim is to initiate community level monitoring and management of the seaweed. Our journey has been marked by significant milestones and an inspiring expansion of our community engagement efforts. &nbsp;</p> <h3>Enhancing monitoring with cutting-edge technology</h3> <p>When we first envisioned SarTECH&comma; our goal was to deploy a handful of low-cost cameras to monitor the sargassum that affects the Mexican coastlines. We surpass our original goal by installing six cameras&comma; two more than planned! We also broadened our reach to include locations in Jamaica and Ghana&comma; supported by the ESRC funded <a href='https://www.sartrac.org/'>SARTRAC</a>. These cameras&comma; designed and engineered with the expertise of the Institute of Engineering of UNAM and PhD talents of Jose Antonio Lopez Portillo&comma; offer hourly data (detailed overhead views of beached and nearshore sargassum) that help us quantify sargassum distribution effectively. Thanks to advanced algorithms&comma; these images are transformed into a bird&#39;s eye view&comma; making every pixel visible for sargassum tracking. Furthermore&comma; a new PAPIIT grant won by colleagues in Mexico with Dr Dominguez (Support Programme for Research and Innovation Projects in Mexico) allowed the team to install a meteorological station and acoustic doppler current profiler to record data on winds and currents. This data provides a cornerstone for developing a robust early warning system that will benefit entire communities.</p> <p><img alt='Team members standing by information boards on the coast' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-sargassum-monitoring-points.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 231px;' /></p> <p><img alt='' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-unam-uos-teams.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 165px;' /></p> <p><img alt='' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-newspaper-article.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 378px;' /></p> Pelagic sargassum seaweed has proliferated throughout the tropical Atlantic Ocean&amp;comma; causing immense damage to coastal communities from Mexico to Ghana since 2011https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-sargassum-monitoring.jpghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-sargassum-monitoring.jpgA split image showing 3 team members posing with the cameras and a diver positioning the camera on the sea bedsmmi/news/smmi/news/2024/05/transforming-sargassum-monitoring.page/smmi/news/2024/05/transforming-sargassum-monitoring.pageTransforming sargassum monitoring

Transforming sargassum monitoring through community and technology (SarTECH)

Thu, 09 May 2024 08:00:00 +0000 <p>Our project &quot;Interactive Community Engagement Using Technology and Citizen Science for School and Community Capacity Building on Pelagic Sargassum in Mexico&quot; (SarTECH) is funded by the SMMI. Led by Dr Victoria Dominguez Almela&comma; the aim is to initiate community level monitoring and management of the seaweed. Our journey has been marked by significant milestones and an inspiring expansion of our community engagement efforts. &nbsp;</p> <h3>Enhancing monitoring with cutting-edge technology</h3> <p>When we first envisioned SarTECH&comma; our goal was to deploy a handful of low-cost cameras to monitor the sargassum that affects the Mexican coastlines. We surpass our original goal by installing six cameras&comma; two more than planned! We also broadened our reach to include locations in Jamaica and Ghana&comma; supported by the ESRC funded <a href='https://www.sartrac.org/'>SARTRAC</a>. These cameras&comma; designed and engineered with the expertise of the Institute of Engineering of UNAM and PhD talents of Jose Antonio Lopez Portillo&comma; offer hourly data (detailed overhead views of beached and nearshore sargassum) that help us quantify sargassum distribution effectively. Thanks to advanced algorithms&comma; these images are transformed into a bird&#39;s eye view&comma; making every pixel visible for sargassum tracking. Furthermore&comma; a new PAPIIT grant won by colleagues in Mexico with Dr Dominguez (Support Programme for Research and Innovation Projects in Mexico) allowed the team to install a meteorological station and acoustic doppler current profiler to record data on winds and currents. This data provides a cornerstone for developing a robust early warning system that will benefit entire communities.</p> <p><img alt='Team members standing by information boards on the coast' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-sargassum-monitoring-points.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 231px;' /></p> <p><img alt='' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-unam-uos-teams.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 165px;' /></p> <p><img alt='' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-newspaper-article.jpg' style='width: 480px; height: 378px;' /></p> Pelagic sargassum seaweed has proliferated throughout the tropical Atlantic Ocean&amp;comma; causing immense damage to coastal communities from Mexico to Ghana since 2011https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-sargassum-monitoring.jpghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/sartech-sargassum-monitoring.jpgA split image showing 3 team members posing with the cameras and a diver positioning the camera on the sea bedsmmi/news/smmi/news/2024/05/transforming-sargassum-monitoring.page/smmi/news/2024/05/transforming-sargassum-monitoring.page
Professor Alberto Naveira Garabato delivers the inaugural Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture

Professor Alberto Naveira Garabato delivers the inaugural Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture

Fri, 23 Aug 2024 12:19:00 +0000 <p>The inaugural lecture &ldquo;Rewriting the Tale of Deep-Ocean Upwelling&rdquo; was delivered by Professor&comma; or more correctly <em>Regius</em>&comma; <a href='/people/5x2hkq/professor-alberto-naveira-garabato'>Alberto Naveira Garabato</a> of the School of Ocean &amp; Earth Science&comma; the Regius Professor of Ocean Sciences. The event was sponsored by the <a href='/research/institutes-centres/marine-maritime-institute'>Southampton Marine and Maritime Institute</a> as part of the flagship Earth and Ocean Science &ldquo;EOS&rdquo; lecture series at NOCS.</p> <p>Regius Professorships are an ancient tradition of royal patronage or appointment that dates back to 1497 with the establishment by King James IV of Scotland of the first Regius Professorship in medicine at the University of Aberdeen.&nbsp; Until the last decade&comma; Regius professorships have only rarely been awarded since the reign of Queen Victoria. The Regius Chair in Ocean Sciences was <a href='/smmi/news/2016/06/06-regius-professorship-in-ocean-sciences.page'>awarded in 2016</a> by Her Majesty the Queen as part of her 90<sup>th</sup> Birthday celebrations&comma; to acknowledge the University&rsquo;s distinctive and broad excellence in ocean-facing research. There are only a few Regius Professorships in environmental subjects.&nbsp; Emeritus Professor Harry Bryden FRS was the first Regius Professor of Ocean Sciences until Professor Naveira Garabato took on the position in 2023. This is the University&rsquo;s second Regius Professorship following the granting of the Regius Professorship in Computer Sciences in 2013 to commemorate Her Majesty&rsquo;s Diamond Jubilee&comma; and presently held by Dame Wendy Hall FRS.&nbsp;</p> <p>Professor Naveira Garabato is an internationally recognised oceanographer and a alumnus having completed a BSc (Hons) in Physics with Oceanography before undertaking a PhD at the University of Liverpool and a post-doctoral fellowship at the University of East Anglia.&nbsp; Alberto returned to the in 2005 for a lectureship and was promoted to Professor in 2011.&nbsp; He has a formidable funding recording including large grants from UKRI and ERC.&nbsp; He wrote and led the NERC-EPSRC CDT <em>NEXUSS</em> on the smart and autonomous observing of the environment and is a co-lead of the recently awarded EPSRC CDT <em>Mathematics for our Future Climate</em>&comma; led by Prof Dan Crisan at Imperial College.&nbsp; Alberto&rsquo;s research has been internationally and widely recognised including the Philip Leverhulme Prize (2010)&comma; a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award (2014)&comma; the Challenger Medal of the Challenger Society for Marine Science (2020) and the European Geoscience Union Nansen Medal in 2023.</p> <p>In his lecture&comma; Professor Naveira Garabato projected his capabilities as a world-class physical oceanographer and scientific communicator.&nbsp; He principally investigates processes that govern ocean circulation and its impact on climate with particular focus on the Southern Ocean and Antarctica.&nbsp; In this talk Alberto interrogated the fundamental&comma; yet poorly understood&comma; process of ocean upwelling.&nbsp; How dense&comma; cold waters sink in the oceans is intuitive but the mechanisms by which deep waters return to the surface remains poorly explained.&nbsp; He described recent seagoing experiments as part of the <a href='/oes/research/projects/bottom-boundary-layer-turbulence-and-abyssal-recipes-blt-recipes.page'>BLT Recipes Project</a>&comma; and highlighted how interactions between tides&comma; currents and ocean floor topography generate (micro-)turbulence and sustain deep-ocean upwelling. &nbsp;Alberto was joined in this celebration by colleagues&comma; some past PhD and early career researchers at Southampton&comma; from the British Antarctic Survey&comma; the National Oceanography Centre (NOC)&comma; and the Universities of Cambridge&comma; Liverpool&comma; and Exeter.</p> <p>In his closing remarks&comma; Vice President (Research and Enterprise) Professor Mark Spearing&comma; thanked Alberto for his engaging and extremely clear presentation. He welcomed the establishment of the Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture as a major event in the University calendar&comma; with the next event planned for June 2025 and featuring a major international speaker.&nbsp;</p> <p><img alt='Drinks reception following the Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture' height='354' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/regius_profressor_drinks-600x354.jpg' width='600' /></p> <p><em>Drinks reception following the Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture</em></p> Colleagues from across the University gathered in late July in the Charnock Lecture Theatre at the National Oceanography Centre Southampton (NOCS) to celebrate the first edition of the Regius Professor of Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture. https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/regius_professor_lecture-480x297.jpghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/regius_professor_lecture-480x294.jpgRegius Professor Alberto Naveira Garabato in front of the presentation screen delivers the inaugural annual lecturesmmi/news/smmi/news/2024/08/professor-alberto-naveira-garabato-delivers-the-inaugural-university-of-southampton-regius-professor-in-ocean-sciences-annual-lecture.page/smmi/news/2024/08/professor-alberto-naveira-garabato-delivers-the-inaugural-university-of-southampton-regius-professor-in-ocean-sciences-annual-lecture.pageProfessor Alberto Naveira Garabato delivers the inaugural Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture

Professor Alberto Naveira Garabato delivers the inaugural Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture – July 2024

Fri, 23 Aug 2024 12:19:00 +0000 <p>The inaugural lecture &ldquo;Rewriting the Tale of Deep-Ocean Upwelling&rdquo; was delivered by Professor&comma; or more correctly <em>Regius</em>&comma; <a href='/people/5x2hkq/professor-alberto-naveira-garabato'>Alberto Naveira Garabato</a> of the School of Ocean &amp; Earth Science&comma; the Regius Professor of Ocean Sciences. The event was sponsored by the <a href='/research/institutes-centres/marine-maritime-institute'>Southampton Marine and Maritime Institute</a> as part of the flagship Earth and Ocean Science &ldquo;EOS&rdquo; lecture series at NOCS.</p> <p>Regius Professorships are an ancient tradition of royal patronage or appointment that dates back to 1497 with the establishment by King James IV of Scotland of the first Regius Professorship in medicine at the University of Aberdeen.&nbsp; Until the last decade&comma; Regius professorships have only rarely been awarded since the reign of Queen Victoria. The Regius Chair in Ocean Sciences was <a href='/smmi/news/2016/06/06-regius-professorship-in-ocean-sciences.page'>awarded in 2016</a> by Her Majesty the Queen as part of her 90<sup>th</sup> Birthday celebrations&comma; to acknowledge the University&rsquo;s distinctive and broad excellence in ocean-facing research. There are only a few Regius Professorships in environmental subjects.&nbsp; Emeritus Professor Harry Bryden FRS was the first Regius Professor of Ocean Sciences until Professor Naveira Garabato took on the position in 2023. This is the University&rsquo;s second Regius Professorship following the granting of the Regius Professorship in Computer Sciences in 2013 to commemorate Her Majesty&rsquo;s Diamond Jubilee&comma; and presently held by Dame Wendy Hall FRS.&nbsp;</p> <p>Professor Naveira Garabato is an internationally recognised oceanographer and a alumnus having completed a BSc (Hons) in Physics with Oceanography before undertaking a PhD at the University of Liverpool and a post-doctoral fellowship at the University of East Anglia.&nbsp; Alberto returned to the in 2005 for a lectureship and was promoted to Professor in 2011.&nbsp; He has a formidable funding recording including large grants from UKRI and ERC.&nbsp; He wrote and led the NERC-EPSRC CDT <em>NEXUSS</em> on the smart and autonomous observing of the environment and is a co-lead of the recently awarded EPSRC CDT <em>Mathematics for our Future Climate</em>&comma; led by Prof Dan Crisan at Imperial College.&nbsp; Alberto&rsquo;s research has been internationally and widely recognised including the Philip Leverhulme Prize (2010)&comma; a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award (2014)&comma; the Challenger Medal of the Challenger Society for Marine Science (2020) and the European Geoscience Union Nansen Medal in 2023.</p> <p>In his lecture&comma; Professor Naveira Garabato projected his capabilities as a world-class physical oceanographer and scientific communicator.&nbsp; He principally investigates processes that govern ocean circulation and its impact on climate with particular focus on the Southern Ocean and Antarctica.&nbsp; In this talk Alberto interrogated the fundamental&comma; yet poorly understood&comma; process of ocean upwelling.&nbsp; How dense&comma; cold waters sink in the oceans is intuitive but the mechanisms by which deep waters return to the surface remains poorly explained.&nbsp; He described recent seagoing experiments as part of the <a href='/oes/research/projects/bottom-boundary-layer-turbulence-and-abyssal-recipes-blt-recipes.page'>BLT Recipes Project</a>&comma; and highlighted how interactions between tides&comma; currents and ocean floor topography generate (micro-)turbulence and sustain deep-ocean upwelling. &nbsp;Alberto was joined in this celebration by colleagues&comma; some past PhD and early career researchers at Southampton&comma; from the British Antarctic Survey&comma; the National Oceanography Centre (NOC)&comma; and the Universities of Cambridge&comma; Liverpool&comma; and Exeter.</p> <p>In his closing remarks&comma; Vice President (Research and Enterprise) Professor Mark Spearing&comma; thanked Alberto for his engaging and extremely clear presentation. He welcomed the establishment of the Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture as a major event in the University calendar&comma; with the next event planned for June 2025 and featuring a major international speaker.&nbsp;</p> <p><img alt='Drinks reception following the Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture' height='354' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/regius_profressor_drinks-600x354.jpg' width='600' /></p> <p><em>Drinks reception following the Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture</em></p> Colleagues from across the University gathered in late July in the Charnock Lecture Theatre at the National Oceanography Centre Southampton (NOCS) to celebrate the first edition of the Regius Professor of Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture. https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/regius_professor_lecture-480x294.jpghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/regius_professor_lecture-480x294.jpgRegius Professor Alberto Naveira Garabato in front of the presentation screen delivers the inaugural annual lecturesmmi/news/smmi/news/2024/08/professor-alberto-naveira-garabato-delivers-the-inaugural-university-of-southampton-regius-professor-in-ocean-sciences-annual-lecture.page/smmi/news/2024/08/professor-alberto-naveira-garabato-delivers-the-inaugural-university-of-southampton-regius-professor-in-ocean-sciences-annual-lecture.page
Professor Alberto Naveira Garabato delivers inaugural Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture

Professor Alberto Naveira Garabato delivers inaugural UoS Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture

Fri, 23 Aug 2024 12:19:00 +0000 <p>The inaugural lecture &ldquo;Rewriting the Tale of Deep-Ocean Upwelling&rdquo; was delivered by Professor&comma; or more correctly <em>Regius</em>&comma; <a href='/people/5x2hkq/professor-alberto-naveira-garabato'>Alberto Naveira Garabato</a> of the School of Ocean &amp; Earth Science&comma; the Regius Professor of Ocean Sciences. The event was sponsored by the <a href='/research/institutes-centres/marine-maritime-institute'>Southampton Marine and Maritime Institute</a> as part of the flagship Earth and Ocean Science &ldquo;EOS&rdquo; lecture series at NOCS.</p> <p>Regius Professorships are an ancient tradition of royal patronage or appointment that dates back to 1497 with the establishment by King James IV of Scotland of the first Regius Professorship in medicine at the University of Aberdeen.&nbsp; Until the last decade&comma; Regius professorships have only rarely been awarded since the reign of Queen Victoria. The Regius Chair in Ocean Sciences was <a href='/smmi/news/2016/06/06-regius-professorship-in-ocean-sciences.page'>awarded in 2016</a> by Her Majesty the Queen as part of her 90<sup>th</sup> Birthday celebrations&comma; to acknowledge the University&rsquo;s distinctive and broad excellence in ocean-facing research. There are only a few Regius Professorships in environmental subjects.&nbsp; Emeritus Professor Harry Bryden FRS was the first Regius Professor of Ocean Sciences until Professor Naveira Garabato took on the position in 2023. This is the University&rsquo;s second Regius Professorship following the granting of the Regius Professorship in Computer Sciences in 2013 to commemorate Her Majesty&rsquo;s Diamond Jubilee&comma; and presently held by Dame Wendy Hall FRS.&nbsp;</p> <p>Professor Naveira Garabato is an internationally recognised oceanographer and a alumnus having completed a BSc (Hons) in Physics with Oceanography before undertaking a PhD at the University of Liverpool and a post-doctoral fellowship at the University of East Anglia.&nbsp; Alberto returned to the in 2005 for a lectureship and was promoted to Professor in 2011.&nbsp; He has a formidable funding recording including large grants from UKRI and ERC.&nbsp; He wrote and led the NERC-EPSRC CDT <em>NEXUSS</em> on the smart and autonomous observing of the environment and is a co-lead of the recently awarded EPSRC CDT <em>Mathematics for our Future Climate</em>&comma; led by Prof Dan Crisan at Imperial College.&nbsp; Alberto&rsquo;s research has been internationally and widely recognised including the Philip Leverhulme Prize (2010)&comma; a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award (2014)&comma; the Challenger Medal of the Challenger Society for Marine Science (2020) and the European Geoscience Union Nansen Medal in 2023.</p> <p>In his lecture&comma; Professor Naveira Garabato projected his capabilities as a world-class physical oceanographer and scientific communicator.&nbsp; He principally investigates processes that govern ocean circulation and its impact on climate with particular focus on the Southern Ocean and Antarctica.&nbsp; In this talk Alberto interrogated the fundamental&comma; yet poorly understood&comma; process of ocean upwelling.&nbsp; How dense&comma; cold waters sink in the oceans is intuitive but the mechanisms by which deep waters return to the surface remains poorly explained.&nbsp; He described recent seagoing experiments as part of the <a href='/oes/research/projects/bottom-boundary-layer-turbulence-and-abyssal-recipes-blt-recipes.page'>BLT Recipes Project</a>&comma; and highlighted how interactions between tides&comma; currents and ocean floor topography generate (micro-)turbulence and sustain deep-ocean upwelling. &nbsp;Alberto was joined in this celebration by colleagues&comma; some past PhD and early career researchers at Southampton&comma; from the British Antarctic Survey&comma; the National Oceanography Centre (NOC)&comma; and the Universities of Cambridge&comma; Liverpool&comma; and Exeter.</p> <p>In his closing remarks&comma; Vice President (Research and Enterprise) Professor Mark Spearing&comma; thanked Alberto for his engaging and extremely clear presentation. He welcomed the establishment of the Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture as a major event in the University calendar&comma; with the next event planned for June 2025 and featuring a major international speaker.&nbsp;</p> <p><img alt='Drinks reception following the Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture' height='354' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/regius_profressor_drinks-600x354.jpg' width='600' /></p> <p><em>Drinks reception following the Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture</em></p> Colleagues from across the University gathered in late July in the Charnock Lecture Theatre at the National Oceanography Centre Southampton (NOCS) to celebrate the first edition of the Regius Professor of Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture. https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/regius_professor_lecture-480x297.jpghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/regius_professor_lecture-480x297.jpgRegius Professor Alberto Naveira Garabato in front of the presentation screen delivers the inaugural annual lecturesmmi/news/smmi/news/2024/08/professor-alberto-naveira-garabato-delivers-inaugural-university-of-southampton-regius-professor-in-ocean-sciences-annual-lecture.page/smmi/news/2024/08/professor-alberto-naveira-garabato-delivers-inaugural-university-of-southampton-regius-professor-in-ocean-sciences-annual-lecture.pageProfessor Alberto Naveira Garabato delivers inaugural Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture

Professor Alberto Naveira Garabato delivers inaugural UoS Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture

Fri, 23 Aug 2024 12:19:00 +0000 <p>The inaugural lecture &ldquo;Rewriting the Tale of Deep-Ocean Upwelling&rdquo; was delivered by Professor&comma; or more correctly <em>Regius</em>&comma; <a href='/people/5x2hkq/professor-alberto-naveira-garabato'>Alberto Naveira Garabato</a> of the School of Ocean &amp; Earth Science&comma; the Regius Professor of Ocean Sciences. The event was sponsored by the <a href='/research/institutes-centres/marine-maritime-institute'>Southampton Marine and Maritime Institute</a> as part of the flagship Earth and Ocean Science &ldquo;EOS&rdquo; lecture series at NOCS.</p> <p>Regius Professorships are an ancient tradition of royal patronage or appointment that dates back to 1497 with the establishment by King James IV of Scotland of the first Regius Professorship in medicine at the University of Aberdeen.&nbsp; Until the last decade&comma; Regius professorships have only rarely been awarded since the reign of Queen Victoria. The Regius Chair in Ocean Sciences was <a href='/smmi/news/2016/06/06-regius-professorship-in-ocean-sciences.page'>awarded in 2016</a> by Her Majesty the Queen as part of her 90<sup>th</sup> Birthday celebrations&comma; to acknowledge the University&rsquo;s distinctive and broad excellence in ocean-facing research. There are only a few Regius Professorships in environmental subjects.&nbsp; Emeritus Professor Harry Bryden FRS was the first Regius Professor of Ocean Sciences until Professor Naveira Garabato took on the position in 2023. This is the University&rsquo;s second Regius Professorship following the granting of the Regius Professorship in Computer Sciences in 2013 to commemorate Her Majesty&rsquo;s Diamond Jubilee&comma; and presently held by Dame Wendy Hall FRS.&nbsp;</p> <p>Professor Naveira Garabato is an internationally recognised oceanographer and a alumnus having completed a BSc (Hons) in Physics with Oceanography before undertaking a PhD at the University of Liverpool and a post-doctoral fellowship at the University of East Anglia.&nbsp; Alberto returned to the in 2005 for a lectureship and was promoted to Professor in 2011.&nbsp; He has a formidable funding recording including large grants from UKRI and ERC.&nbsp; He wrote and led the NERC-EPSRC CDT <em>NEXUSS</em> on the smart and autonomous observing of the environment and is a co-lead of the recently awarded EPSRC CDT <em>Mathematics for our Future Climate</em>&comma; led by Prof Dan Crisan at Imperial College.&nbsp; Alberto&rsquo;s research has been internationally and widely recognised including the Philip Leverhulme Prize (2010)&comma; a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award (2014)&comma; the Challenger Medal of the Challenger Society for Marine Science (2020) and the European Geoscience Union Nansen Medal in 2023.</p> <p>In his lecture&comma; Professor Naveira Garabato projected his capabilities as a world-class physical oceanographer and scientific communicator.&nbsp; He principally investigates processes that govern ocean circulation and its impact on climate with particular focus on the Southern Ocean and Antarctica.&nbsp; In this talk Alberto interrogated the fundamental&comma; yet poorly understood&comma; process of ocean upwelling.&nbsp; How dense&comma; cold waters sink in the oceans is intuitive but the mechanisms by which deep waters return to the surface remains poorly explained.&nbsp; He described recent seagoing experiments as part of the <a href='/oes/research/projects/bottom-boundary-layer-turbulence-and-abyssal-recipes-blt-recipes.page'>BLT Recipes Project</a>&comma; and highlighted how interactions between tides&comma; currents and ocean floor topography generate (micro-)turbulence and sustain deep-ocean upwelling. &nbsp;Alberto was joined in this celebration by colleagues&comma; some past PhD and early career researchers at Southampton&comma; from the British Antarctic Survey&comma; the National Oceanography Centre (NOC)&comma; and the Universities of Cambridge&comma; Liverpool&comma; and Exeter.</p> <p>In his closing remarks&comma; Vice President (Research and Enterprise) Professor Mark Spearing&comma; thanked Alberto for his engaging and extremely clear presentation. He welcomed the establishment of the Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture as a major event in the University calendar&comma; with the next event planned for June 2025 and featuring a major international speaker.&nbsp;</p> <p><img alt='Drinks reception following the Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture' height='354' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/regius_profressor_drinks-600x354.jpg' width='600' /></p> <p><em>Drinks reception following the Regius Professor in Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture</em></p> Colleagues from across the University gathered in late July in the Charnock Lecture Theatre at the National Oceanography Centre Southampton (NOCS) to celebrate the first edition of the Regius Professor of Ocean Sciences Annual Lecture. https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/regius_professor_lecture-480x297.jpghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/regius_professor_lecture-480x297.jpgRegius Professor Alberto Naveira Garabato in front of the presentation screen delivers the inaugural annual lecturesmmi/news/smmi/news/2024/08/professor-alberto-naveira-garabato-delivers-inaugural-university-of-southampton-regius-professor-in-ocean-sciences-annual-lecture.page/smmi/news/2024/08/professor-alberto-naveira-garabato-delivers-inaugural-university-of-southampton-regius-professor-in-ocean-sciences-annual-lecture.page
Creating Positive Change Coastal Communities

Themed Networking Lunch: Creating Positive Change in our Coastal Communities

Tue, 01 Oct 2024 12:00:00 +0000 <p>The SMMI&rsquo;s Coastal Communities Special Interest Group aims to work with stakeholders from research&comma; industry&comma; policy and beyond to understand the needs of our coastal communities and increase our impact together to the benefit of the coast locally&comma; nationally&comma; and internationally. In July&comma; we hosted an event to showcase current research and projects and identify priorities for creating positive change in local coastal communities.</p> <p>Prof Sir Stephen Holgate&comma; UKRI Clean Air Champion&comma; opened the event emphatically discussing the &ldquo;wicked problem&rdquo; that is air pollution. With port cities dotted along the coast&comma; there is an additional burden on health from shipping emissions&comma; intersecting with high deprivation thus highlighting pollution sources and inequities which contribute to ill health in society.&nbsp; The SMMI&rsquo;s Coastal Communities Special Interest Group aims to work with stakeholders from research&comma; industry&comma; policy and beyond to understand the needs of our coastal communities and increase our impact together to the benefit of the coast locally&comma; nationally&comma; and internationally. In July&comma; we hosted an event to showcase current research and projects and identify priorities for creating positive change in local coastal communities.</p> <p><img alt='(L-R clockwise) Presentations by: Prof Sir Stephen Holgate&comma; The Ocean Conservation Trust representatives Nicola Bridge and Eden Stevens&comma; and Prof Ivan Haigh. ' height='300' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/smmi_conference.jpg' width='800' /></p> <p>Prof Sir Stephen Holgate&comma; UKRI Clean Air Champion&comma; opened the event emphatically discussing the &ldquo;wicked problem&rdquo; that is air pollution. With port cities dotted along the coast&comma; there is an additional burden on health from shipping emissions&comma; intersecting with high deprivation thus highlighting pollution sources and inequities which contribute to ill health in society.&nbsp;</p> <p>Nicola Bridge and Eden Stevens introduced the Ocean Conservation Trust&comma; a charity that serves to protect and restore the ocean&comma; with an understanding that threats to the ocean are an outcome of human behaviour. By placing people at the centre of the narrative&comma; it allows collaboration and empowerment of local communities to take action and drive change. &nbsp;</p> <p>Prof Ivan Haigh&comma; from the National Oceanography Centre Southampton&comma; introduced the latest research on sea level rise and its impact on the Coast. With the ocean covering 70% of the Earth&rsquo;s surface&comma; and 90% of the world&rsquo;s heat going into the ocean&comma; we are seeing record levels of high ocean temperatures&comma; resulting in thermal expansion and massive impacts on sea levels rising. The consequences of this were illustrated by closures of the Thames Barrier&comma; which have doubled over two seasons&comma; in order to adapt to rising waters. &nbsp;</p> <p>Building on the latest science and interventions shared during the presentations&comma; all attendees engaged in themed discussions&comma; examining: research and society&comma; health and air quality&comma; resilience and vulnerability&comma; and natural environment. We were able to further explore the key challenges in these areas&comma; whilst building relationships and trying to navigate how to address these priorities in collaboration. The aim of the lunch &ndash; for every attendee to have made a new contact in the coastal communities space &ndash; was widely considered to be successfully achieved. New conversations were had&comma; old acquaintances reignited;&nbsp; we look forward to further facilitating these networks and discussions in the coming academic year.</p> The UK coast&amp;comma; renowned for its complexity and diversity&amp;comma; is vital for the economy and culture of the nation.smmi/news/smmi/news/2024/10/creating-positive-change-coastal-communities.page/smmi/news/2024/10/creating-positive-change-coastal-communities.pageCreating Positive Change Coastal Communities

Themed Networking Lunch: Creating Positive Change in our Coastal Communities

Tue, 01 Oct 2024 12:00:00 +0000<p>The SMMI&rsquo;s Coastal Communities Special Interest Group aims to work with stakeholders from research&comma; industry&comma; policy and beyond to understand the needs of our coastal communities and increase our impact together to the benefit of the coast locally&comma; nationally&comma; and internationally. In July&comma; we hosted an event to showcase current research and projects and identify priorities for creating positive change in local coastal communities.</p> <p>Prof Sir Stephen Holgate&comma; UKRI Clean Air Champion&comma; opened the event emphatically discussing the &ldquo;wicked problem&rdquo; that is air pollution. With port cities dotted along the coast&comma; there is an additional burden on health from shipping emissions&comma; intersecting with high deprivation thus highlighting pollution sources and inequities which contribute to ill health in society.&nbsp; The SMMI&rsquo;s Coastal Communities Special Interest Group aims to work with stakeholders from research&comma; industry&comma; policy and beyond to understand the needs of our coastal communities and increase our impact together to the benefit of the coast locally&comma; nationally&comma; and internationally. In July&comma; we hosted an event to showcase current research and projects and identify priorities for creating positive change in local coastal communities.</p> <p><img alt='(L-R clockwise) Presentations by: Prof Sir Stephen Holgate&comma; The Ocean Conservation Trust representatives Nicola Bridge and Eden Stevens&comma; and Prof Ivan Haigh. ' height='300' src='https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/smmi_conference.jpg' width='800' /></p> <p>Prof Sir Stephen Holgate&comma; UKRI Clean Air Champion&comma; opened the event emphatically discussing the &ldquo;wicked problem&rdquo; that is air pollution. With port cities dotted along the coast&comma; there is an additional burden on health from shipping emissions&comma; intersecting with high deprivation thus highlighting pollution sources and inequities which contribute to ill health in society.&nbsp;</p> <p>Nicola Bridge and Eden Stevens introduced the Ocean Conservation Trust&comma; a charity that serves to protect and restore the ocean&comma; with an understanding that threats to the ocean are an outcome of human behaviour. By placing people at the centre of the narrative&comma; it allows collaboration and empowerment of local communities to take action and drive change. &nbsp;</p> <p>Prof Ivan Haigh&comma; from the National Oceanography Centre Southampton&comma; introduced the latest research on sea level rise and its impact on the Coast. With the ocean covering 70% of the Earth&rsquo;s surface&comma; and 90% of the world&rsquo;s heat going into the ocean&comma; we are seeing record levels of high ocean temperatures&comma; resulting in thermal expansion and massive impacts on sea levels rising. The consequences of this were illustrated by closures of the Thames Barrier&comma; which have doubled over two seasons&comma; in order to adapt to rising waters. &nbsp;</p> <p>Building on the latest science and interventions shared during the presentations&comma; all attendees engaged in themed discussions&comma; examining: research and society&comma; health and air quality&comma; resilience and vulnerability&comma; and natural environment. We were able to further explore the key challenges in these areas&comma; whilst building relationships and trying to navigate how to address these priorities in collaboration. The aim of the lunch &ndash; for every attendee to have made a new contact in the coastal communities space &ndash; was widely considered to be successfully achieved. New conversations were had&comma; old acquaintances reignited;&nbsp; we look forward to further facilitating these networks and discussions in the coming academic year.</p> The UK coast&amp;comma; renowned for its complexity and diversity&amp;comma; is vital for the economy and culture of the nation.smmi/news/smmi/news/2024/10/creating-positive-change-coastal-communities.page/smmi/news/2024/10/creating-positive-change-coastal-communities.pagehttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/audience_at_the_conference_1.jpghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/audience_at_the_conference.jpgAudience at the SMMI conference
Why oral history should be valued beyond the humanities

Why oral history should be valued beyond the humanities

Mon, 19 Aug 2024 00:00:00 +0000 <p>The half-day training session was held in April 2024&comma; and provoked conversation around the potential for oral history to be used in disciplines between the humanities. The reflections on the definition&comma; best practice and applications of oral history were written up into an article.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Following this training&comma; the SIG leads have published a short article in <strong>THE Campus.&nbsp;</strong><a href='https://www.timeshighereducation.com/campus/oral-history-all-research-method-crosses-disciplinary-boundaries'>Read the full article</a><b>.</b></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> The SMMI organised a Coastal Community SIG’s introductory oral history training for researchers across the University.https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/charlestown_2022-10_svdp.jpghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/charlestown_2022-10_svdp.jpgSailing boats moored on a river channel next to the walls of a medieval townsmmi/news/smmi/news/2024/08/why-oral-history-should-be-valued-beyond-the-humanities-.page/smmi/news/2024/08/why-oral-history-should-be-valued-beyond-the-humanities-.pageWhy oral history should be valued beyond the humanities

Why oral history should be valued beyond the humanities

Mon, 19 Aug 2024 00:00:00 +0000 <p>The half-day training session was held in April 2024&comma; and provoked conversation around the potential for oral history to be used in disciplines between the humanities. The reflections on the definition&comma; best practice and applications of oral history were written up into an article.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Following this training&comma; the SIG leads have published a short article in <strong>THE Campus.&nbsp;</strong><a href='https://www.timeshighereducation.com/campus/oral-history-all-research-method-crosses-disciplinary-boundaries'>Read the full article</a><b>.</b></p> <p>&nbsp;</p> The SMMI organised a Coastal Community SIG’s introductory oral history training for researchers across the University.https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/charlestown_2022-10_svdp.jpghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/charlestown_2022-10_svdp.jpgSailing boats moored on a river channel next to the walls of a medieval townsmmi/news/smmi/news/2024/08/why-oral-history-should-be-valued-beyond-the-humanities-.page/smmi/news/2024/08/why-oral-history-should-be-valued-beyond-the-humanities-.page
AUV2026 will be held in Southampton

AUV2026 will be held in Southampton

Wed, 15 Jan 2025 12:00:00 +0000<p>The city has been chosen for AUV2026&comma; the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) and Oceanic Engineering Society (OES) flagship symposium for Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUV) and marine robotic technologies. The event has been running every two years since 1990. AUV2026 is the17th instalment and will be hosted by the and National Oceanography Centre at their dockside campus between 1-3 September&comma; 2026. &nbsp;</p> <p>&ldquo;In addition&comma; we are excited to announce that AUV2026 will have an IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering Special Issue. All articles will be open access and published before the symposium starts&comma; forming a peer-reviewed route for presentation as part of the technical programme&comma;&rdquo; Professor Blair Thornton of the &comma; who is the symposium chair&comma; says.&nbsp;</p> <p>&ldquo;The special issue will be a great way to share the latest high-quality advances in marine robotics with experts from around the world. All accepted special issue papers will be presented at the symposium alongside other contributions.&rdquo; &nbsp;</p> <p>He adds&comma;&nbsp;</p> <p>&ldquo;AUV is a single track symposium&comma; usually attended by &nbsp;about 150 international experts from universities&comma; industry and government sectors. It&rsquo;s a fast moving field&comma; so I am really excited to see what stories and experiences people come and share.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p> <p>The deadline for contributions to the Journal of Oceanic Engineering Special Issue is 15th July 2025. For more information about AUV2026 and its key dates&comma; visit the symposium website. &nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> Marine robotic experts from around the world will gather in Southampton to exchange knowledge and explore future directions in the exciting and growing field of autonomous underwater robotics.&nbsp;https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/auv_press_release_smmi_01-(2).pnghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/auv_press_release_smmi_01-(2).pngAutonomous Underwater Vehicle Smarty200 being deployed Autonomous Underwater Vehicle on the surface of the seaAutonomous Underwater Vehicle Smarty200 being deployed smmi/news/smmi/news/2025/01/auv2026-will-be-held-in-southampton.page/smmi/news/2025/01/auv2026-will-be-held-in-southampton.pageAUV2026 will be held in Southampton

AUV2026 will be held in Southampton

Wed, 15 Jan 2025 12:00:00 +0000<p>The city has been chosen for AUV2026&comma; the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) and Oceanic Engineering Society (OES) flagship symposium for Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUV) and marine robotic technologies. The event has been running every two years since 1990. AUV2026 is the17th instalment and will be hosted by the and National Oceanography Centre at their dockside campus between 1-3 September&comma; 2026. &nbsp;</p> <p>&ldquo;In addition&comma; we are excited to announce that AUV2026 will have an IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering Special Issue. All articles will be open access and published before the symposium starts&comma; forming a peer-reviewed route for presentation as part of the technical programme&comma;&rdquo; Professor Blair Thornton of the &comma; who is the symposium chair&comma; says.&nbsp;</p> <p>&ldquo;The special issue will be a great way to share the latest high-quality advances in marine robotics with experts from around the world. All accepted special issue papers will be presented at the symposium alongside other contributions.&rdquo; &nbsp;</p> <p>He adds&comma;&nbsp;</p> <p>&ldquo;AUV is a single track symposium&comma; usually attended by &nbsp;about 150 international experts from universities&comma; industry and government sectors. It&rsquo;s a fast moving field&comma; so I am really excited to see what stories and experiences people come and share.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p> <p>The deadline for contributions to the Journal of Oceanic Engineering Special Issue is 15th July 2025. For more information about AUV2026 and its key dates&comma; visit the symposium website. &nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> Marine robotic experts from around the world will gather in Southampton to exchange knowledge and explore future directions in the exciting and growing field of autonomous underwater robotics.&nbsp;https://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/auv_press_release_smmi_01-(2).pnghttps://leaf.soton.ac.uk/static/uploads/auv_press_release_smmi_01-(2).pngAutonomous Underwater Vehicle Smarty200 being deployed Autonomous Underwater Vehicle on the surface of the seaAutonomous Underwater Vehicle Smarty200 being deployed smmi/news/smmi/news/2025/01/auv2026-will-be-held-in-southampton.page/smmi/news/2025/01/auv2026-will-be-held-in-southampton.page