The U.S. Fish Commission Steamer Albatross: A History (Papers from a Symposium)


Autoria(s): Jennings, Mark; Dunbar, Kurt
Data(s)

1999

Resumo

At her launch on 19 October 1882 in Wilmington, Del., the Albatross was the world’s first large deep-sea oceanographic and fisheries research vessel, and she would go on to have a distinguished 40-year career, ranging from the north Atlantic Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico, around Cape Horn in 1887–88, and into the North Pacific. By 1908, Deputy Fish Commissioner Hugh M. Smith reported that “The Albatross has contributed more to the knowledge of marine biology than has any other vessel.” And, of course, her career continued for another 13 years, being decommissioned in late 1921, serving later as a training vessel for nautical cadets, and disappearing from the records in Hamburg, Germany, in late 1928.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/9782/1/mfr614intro.pdf

Jennings, Mark and Dunbar, Kurt (1999) The U.S. Fish Commission Steamer Albatross: A History (Papers from a Symposium). Marine Fisheries Review, 61(4), i-vii.

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/9782/

http://spo.nwr.noaa.gov/mfr614/mfr614intro.pdf

Palavras-Chave #Education #Fisheries
Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed