 |
 |  |  |
Mouseover a green dot to see what the different spaces are used for on Atlantis. |
The Research Vessel Atlantis is operated by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
for the American ocean research community. It is one of the most sophisticated research
vessels afloat, equipped with precision navigation. bottom mapping and satellite
communications systems.
Atlantis is designed as a general purpose vessel and specifically equipped to support the
US National Deep Submergence facility, which includes the crewed submersible Alvin, the
remotely operated vehicle Jason and the towed vehicles Argo II and DSL 120.
Atlantis (AGOR-25), delivered to WHOI early in 1997, is one of a new class of US
Navy research vessels designed and built by the Trinity Marine Group's Halter Marine, Inc.,
of Pascagoula, Mississippi. Two Navy owned sister ships are R/V Thomas G. Thompson
(AGOR-23) operated by the University of Washington and R/V Roger Revelle
(AGOR-24) operated by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California,
San Diego. A fourth, nearly identical ship, R/V Ron Brown, is ownned and operated by the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
The ship is the namesake of WHOI's first research vessel, a 142-foot, steel-hulled,
ketch-rigged ship that sailed some 600,000 miles for ocean science from 1931 to 1966, and
also the 210-foot Atlantis II, which served ocean science over a million-mile, 8,000 day-at
sea career that extended from 1963 to 1996.
Go back to main ships page
| |