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PD0RDD > NASA     21.09.98 19:00l 121 Lines 5940 Bytes #-10072 (0) @ WW
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From: PD0RDD@PI8WNO.#UTR.NLD.EU
To  : NASA@WW

Onderwerp: SEAWIFS COMPLETES A YEAR OF REMARKABLE EARTH OBSERVATIONS
David E. Steitz
Headquarters, Washington, DC                  September 17, 1998
(Phone:  202/358-1730)

Lynn Chandler
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD
(Phone:  301/614-5562)

RELEASE:  98-170

SEAWIFS COMPLETES A YEAR OF REMARKABLE EARTH OBSERVATIONS

     For the first time in history, NASA is releasing dramatic 
images documenting the Earth's changing biology, both on land and 
in the oceans, as observed from space for one continuous year.

     The changing seasons of life, the "pulse of the planet," are 
being monitored by the Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view Sensor 
(SeaWiFS), which was launched on Aug. 1, 1997, and has 
continuously produced data since Sept. 18, 1997.  The SeaWiFS 
mission is the first NASA Earth Science data purchase in which 
industry led the development of the full mission.

     "Although originally designed to observe the oceans, SeaWiFS 
provides a unique capability to study the land and atmospheric 
processes as well," said Dr. Gene Feldman, oceanographer, who 
heads SeaWiFS' data processing team at NASA's Goddard Space Flight 
Center, Greenbelt, MD.  "As a result, we can monitor changes in 
the global biosphere with a single sensor over land and ocean."

     Among the highlights of SeaWiFS' first continuous year of 
observation were new insights into the impact of the El Ni–o 
climate anomaly on ocean life.  Further, SeaWiFS was able to 
monitor a variety of natural disasters, including fires in 
Florida, Mexico, Canada, Indonesia and Russia; floods in China; 
dust storms in the Sahara and Gobi Deserts; and the progress of 
hurricanes, such as Bonnie and Danielle.

     SeaWiFS enabled scientists to witness the ocean transition 
from El Ni–o to La Ni–a conditions in the Equatorial Pacific, 
specifically around the Galapagos Island.  The instrument also 
allowed researchers to observe the striking speed with which the 
ocean returned to its pre-El Ni–o state.  While El Ni–o 
essentially shut down the highly productive Equatorial Pacific 
ecosystem, the subsequent La Ni–a resulted in unprecedented 
phytoplankton blooms, which stretched across the entire basin from 
the South American coast to the Western Pacific warm pool.

     Phytoplankton are microscopic marine plants that remove 
carbon dioxide from the atmosphere for internal use.  Scientists 
are eager to understand this exchange of carbon dioxide and the 
role it plays in the global climate.

     "One of the most fascinating events witnessed in the global 
ocean was the Spring bloom in the North Atlantic," said Dr. 
Charles McClain, SeaWiFS project scientist.  "While many regions 
of the ocean experience a spring bloom, the event in the North 
Atlantic was the most dramatic."

     During the winter, storms and surface cooling mix the surface 
waters of the Atlantic, replenishing the nutrient supply from the 
deep, cold, nutrient-rich waters.  Once sunlight is sufficient to 
support plant growth, phytoplankton populations explode and 
persist for nearly three months until nutrients are depleted.  
This bloom migrates northward following the Sun throughout the 
spring and summer.

     Unexpected phenomena observed by SeaWiFS, according to 
McClain, were the massive blooms of coccolithophores, a unique 
type of phytoplankton in the Bering Sea.  These blooms may have a 
significant impact on fish populations in this area, one of the 
most productive fishery regions in the global ocean.  

     During the summer-fall of 1997 and spring of 1998, expansive 
blooms of coccolithophores occurred along the Alaskan shelf.  
These were the first observations of blooms of this magnitude in 
the Bering Sea.  Coccolithophores shed vast numbers of white 
carbonate platelets which cloud the water.  "The net result was 
fish that normally spawn in the adjacent rivers could not 
trasverse the bloom in order to enter the rivers to spawn.  In 
addition, local bird and marine mammal populations had a high 
mortality rates due to starvation because the fish migrated to 
other waters," said McClain.

     NASA is leading an international collaboration using SeaWiFS 
data.  More than 800 scientists representing 35 countries already 
have registered to use the data.  There are over 50 ground-
stations throughout the world which receive data from the 
spacecraft.  In addition, the unique government-industry 
partnership with ORBIMAGE, Dulles VA, represents a new way of 
doing business for NASA.

     SeaWiFS is an essential component of NASA's Earth Sciences 
enterprise, an ongoing effort to study the changing global 
environment.  Using the unique perspective available from space, 
NASA will observe, monitor and assess large-scale environmental 
processes focusing on climate change.

     Remarkable images from this mission are available on the 
World Wide Web at URL:  http://seawifs.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEAWIFS.html

                              -end-

                                                     .   
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