Polar Party

Canadian Coast Guard Ship Louis S. St-Laurent and Coast Guard Cutter Healy

ARCTIC OCEAN – The Canadian Coast Guard Ship Louis S. St-Laurent came alongside the Coast Guard Cutter Healy and the ships tied up so the crews could enjoy a day long morale event aboard the Healy Sept. 5, 2009. 

The 2009 Arctic Barbeque, the day’s main event, featured a “surf and turf” menu.  For the turf offerings, the Healy’s cooks prepared steak, chili and pulled pork.  The Canadians prepared smoked salmon, shrimp, scallops and lobster.

090905-G-8744K-434smPaul Delvin, chief cook of the Louis S. St-Laurent, prepared an enormous cheese platter comprised of fine cheeses from all over the world served atop an eight-foot-long mirror.  “The crew usually only gets processed cheese, so for morale events I like to break out the good stuff,” said Delvin.

After the meal, the crews competed in the inaugural Arctic Olympics.  Cribbage, foosball, air hockey and a number of interactive video games were just a few of the premier events.

Chief Petty Officer Sorjen Manangan represented the Healy as a member of the American air hockey team.

Manangan won his match against Canadian Coast Guard Engineering Cadet Andrew Pearson, but the Canadians rallied and came from behind to claim victory in the air hockey tournament.

“If it would have been air football or something we may have had a chance,” said Manangan.  “I think having the word hockey in the title gave them a mental edge that we just couldn’t overcome,” he joked.

090905-G-8744K-501smThough the Healy crew and science party fought valiantly, it was not enough.  The Canadians won the most events and were crowned champions of the first Arctic games.

“It was all in good fun,” said Navy Petty Officer First Class Richard Lehmkuhl.  “It was a great meal and being able just hang out and take it easy was nice,” he said.

The two ships have been taking part in a multi-year, multi-agency Arctic survey that will help define the Arctic continental shelf.

To download photos of this and other cutter Healy events please visit http://www.flickr.com/photos/cutterhealy

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Healy Science Team Makes Seamount Discovery

seamountARCTIC OCEAN – Scientists aboard the Coast Guard Cutter Healy, using a 12kHz multi-beam echosounder, discovered a new underwater mountain, known as a seamount, on the Arctic floor Aug. 25, 2009.

ResearchThe scientists currently onboard the Healy have been mapping the ocean floor in collaboration with their Canadian counterparts aboard the Canadian Coast Guard Ship Louis S. St-Laurent since Aug. 7, 2009, as part of joint U.S. and Canadian efforts to locate the outer edge of the North American continental shelf.

While enroute to map seafloor features targeted for investigation, the scientists had the ship take a slight detour to allow them to map a small contour that had been noted on a 2002 Russian map. As the ship traveled toward the new target, watchstander Christine Hedge, a teacher from Indiana onboard the Healy as part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Teachers at Sea program, noticed something beginning to appear on the shipboard monitors. She alerted the scientific team in time to redirect the ship, which enabled the scientists to map the seamount in its entirety.

surveyorThe Healy’s high tech mapping system uncovered the seamount, estimated to be at least 1,100 meters tall, in the midst of an otherwise flat and featureless stretch of seafloor approximately 3,800 meters deep. It is located 700 miles north of Alaska.

Underwater features are generally considered seamounts if they reach a height of at least 1,000 meters above the seafloor.

The mapping effort onboard Healy is led by Co-Chief Scientists Dr. Larry Mayer and Capt. Andy Armstrong of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the University of New Hampshire Joint Hydrographic Center.

The Great Wall Of Science“From a scientific point of view it’s extremely interesting,” said Armstrong. “It’s in an area where, based on our existing knowledge of the Arctic, we didn’t expect anything to be. So the scientists on this cruise and ashore are going to be looking at this and using this information to recalibrate their understanding of the Arctic,” he said.

The Arctic Ocean is the least explored of the earth’s oceans. While Mayer is satisfied with the finding, he says it’s just the beginning. “This is an exciting discovery, but there are many, many more ahead,” he said.

The area around the seamount has not yet been mapped and is depicted as flat in this illustration.The Healy is participating in the work of the U.S. Extended Continental Shelf Task Force, a multi-agency project to delimit the outer edges of the U.S. continental shelf.

The yet to be named seamount is the first to be discovered since the 2003 discovery of a seamount that was eventually named Healy.

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