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8 Maritime Reporter & Engineering News The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) recently took delivery of Henry B. Bigelow, one of a new class of fisheries sur- vey vessels being built under contract with VT Halter Marine Inc., in Pascagoula, Miss. Henry B. Bigelow will support NOAA research efforts in conservation and management of fisheries and marine ecosystems primarily in northeastern U.S. waters, replacing the 45- year old Albatross IV. The ship will be home ported in New England, although a permanent base has not been named. Henry B. Bigelow is the second of four 208-ft. fish- eries survey vessels (FSVs) to be delivered by VT Halter Marine, with the third ship, Pisces, and the as- yet unnamed fourth ship in various stages of construc- tion. The FSVs will have the ability to perform hydro- acoustic surveys of fish, and will also be able to con- duct bottom and mid-water trawls while running phys- ical and biological-oceanographic sampling during a single deployment -- a combined capability unavail- able in the private sector. The ship is named for Henry Bryant Bigelow, the founding director of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and a pioneering ocean researcher whose extensive investigations are recog- nized as the foundation of modern oceanography. His expeditions in the Gulf of Maine, where he collected water samples and data on the phytoplankton, fish and hydrography, made this region one of the most thor- oughly studied bodies of water, for its size, in the world. 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SABINE PASS YARD: 7266 S. 1st Ave Sabine Pass, TX 77655 • 409.963.0035 CENTRAL YARD: 5700 Procter St. Extension Port Arthur, Texas 77642 • 409.963.0035 NOAA Accepts New Survey Vessel Father of Oceanography: Henry B. Bigelow Henry Bryant Bigelow, born in 1879, developed an early pas- sion for nature, sailing and fish- ing that would ultimately lead to the foundation of modern oceanography. Raised on the Massachusetts coast, Bigelow enrolled at Harvard in 1897 and graduated cum laude in 1901. During his time at Harvard, Bigelow befriended Professor Alexander Agassiz, who was well-known at the time for his Pacific Ocean expeditions. In the winter of 1901, Bigelow requested to accompany Agassiz on such a voyage, and served as assistant on a trip to the Maldive Islands in the Indian Ocean. At the end of the trip, Bigelow had the opportunity to study the medusae that had been collected, and his research served as material for his doc- toral thesis and was published in 1904. In 1927, Bigelow was asked to prepare a scientific paper for the US National Academy of Sciences' Committee on Oceanography to address "…whether the United States was contributing as broadly as was desirable to the study of the oceans and if not, what should be done to improve the situa- tion." His work on this project persuaded the Committee that more needed to be done in the field of oceanography, which led to the establishment of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI); incorporated in 1930. Bigelow served as its first Director from 1930 to 1939, and his report, titled Oceanography: Its Scope, Problems, and Economic Importance, was published in 1931. Upon his retirement as director in 1939, he was a member on the Board of Trustees and, in 1960, was named Founder Chairman of the Board in recognition of his achievements there. Additionally, in 1961, the Institution established the Henry Bryant Bigelow Medal in his honor, of which he was the first recipient. Bigelow remained a member of the Harvard faculty during his time at WHOI and after; teaching for a total of 62 years; a tenure he thought must have broken some sort of record. In jest, he remarked that the university owed him a bottle of whiskey for his loyal service; to his surprise, upon his retirement, he was presented with such a gift, "compliments of the President and Fellows." His autobiog- raphy notes that he is the only one to ever have been present- ed a bottle of whiskey on behalf of Harvard University. Bigelow died on December 11, 1967, at the age of 89. His last papers were published following his death, in 1968. (Photo Credit: NOAA) MR AUGUST2006 #1 (1-8).qxd 8/3/2006 4:11 PM Page 10