| 
            
              
              
               
                A fifty year state estimate covering 1950 to  2000
                is now available on the ECCO LAS server at SDSC                The estimate was produced by the "German  ECCO" (GECCO)                group at the University of Hamburg
                The product is described in
                Koehl, A., D. Dommenget, K.  Ueyoshi, D. Stammer, The Global ECCO 
                1952 to 2001 Ocean Synthesis Report No.40,  March 2006.               
                
              
              
                In collaboration with web designer Colleen  Boisvert
                ECCO has launched a new overall project web  site.
                Main purpose of this site is to provide an  integrated view
                of ECCO and it's follow-on projects
                (ECCO-GODAE, ECCO2, GECCO, ...).
                It is hoped that readers will get a clear  understanding
                of 
                ECCO's various activities, and will find
                among ECCO's various ocean state estimation  products 
                those which best suit their needs.
                We welcome any feedback you may wish to provide.               
                
              
                              Scientists at MIT have developed a new  marine ecosystem model that allows its populations of 
                phytoplankton to  realistically evolve, reflecting the diversity in populations in the natural  world. This 
                should lead to a better understanding of the coupling between ocean  and atmospheric chemistry. 
                The model makes use of ECCO's ocean state estimate  to capture the physical environment in 
                which the ecosystem evolves. The study  "Emergent Biogeography of Microbial Communities in a 
                Model Ocean"   by  Michael J. Follows, Stephanie Dutkiewicz, Scott Grant, and Sallie W. Chisholm  was published in today's issue of Science magazine. It is part of the MIT Darwin Project and funded by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. 
                (Click here for a related MIT News  Story) 
                
              
                            In a collaboration between the San Diego  Supercomputing Center 
                (SDSC) and ECCO, 
                a large part of the ECCO products have been  transfered to
                SDSC's  Datacentral                and managed via                Storage Resource Broker (SRB).                To make these data available to the community  via
                different commonly used servers and software  tools,
                including DODS/OPeNDAP and LAS,
                SDSC's DataCentral specialist Roman  Olschanowsky
                and MIT's Constantinos Evangelinos successfully 
                implemented DODS/OPeNDAP on top of SRB.
                The SRB system allows fast and easy data access
                across various disk and tape resources while  ensuring
                archiving/backup capability.
                High speed access to the SDSC data using the  SRB client tools is also 
                available. 
                
              
              On December, 13, 2006,  AGU awarded the Bowie Medal to Carl Wunsch "For his wide-ranging research  in the study of the ocean and its roles in shaping Earth's climate and its  changes, and for unselfish cooperation in the field of physical  oceanography."                   Read  Citation 
                
              
                              A unique set of roughly 320,000 individual sub-surface  measurements
                of salinity (conductivity), temperature, and  depth (CTD) taken by elephant 
                seals which carried bio-logging and telemetry  devices 
                was added to the ECCO state estimation system  as new
                observational constraints.
                The data were kindly provided by the  "Southern Elephant Seals as
                Oceanographic Samplers" (SEaOS)                project involving
                the University of St. Andrew's NERC Sea Mammal  Research Unit (SMRU)                and the British Antarctic Survey.                The uniqueness of the data derives from the  ability of seals
                to go under the sea-ice which covers large  parts of the Southern 
                Ocean poleward of 60S during austral winter and  where in-situ data 
                are not available otherwise. 
                
              
                              Working with researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of  Technology (MIT) and NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL), experts at the NAS facility  visualized, in real time, a one-year ocean simulation with 330 million grid  cells running on 2,048 processors of the Columbia supercomputer.
                (Click here for more  details) 
                
              more stories in our archive section                 |