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Click on a green dot for a photo of a specific room on the Melville. |
R/V Melville is a multipurpose research ship that has served oceanographic scientists well for more than 30 years. It has sailed hundreds of thousands of miles in almost every ocean, carrying out scientific missions involving geology,
geophysics, physical oceanography, marine biology, and chemical
oceanography.
Melville is owned by the US Navy and operated by the Scripps
Institution of Oceanography (SIO),
a graduate division of the University of California, San Diego. The ship, which is 278 feet (85 meters) long, is named after Henry Wallace Melville, a pioneer Arctic explorer
and an innovative US Navy engineer who served in the early 1900s.
R/V Melville was built in 1969 for SIO by the US Navy as part of a focused
plan to improve the academic oceanographic fleet. It is the sister ship
of the R/V Knorr of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
R/V Melville was overhauled about 10 years ago and lengthened by
about 30 feet to add laboratory space, berthing, endurance, and
working area to the fantail for large-scale oceanographic sampling
expeditions. Three Z drives were added to increase maneuverability and
station-keeping ability. A multibeam echo sounding system was also
installed to gather high-resolution bathymetry data.
Melville carries a crew of 23 people and 38 scientists and has an endurance
of about 60 days at sea. It normally cruises at a speed of 12 knots.
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