
STUDENTS HANGIN' WITH DRIFTERS
Normally, parents would never encourage their young children to hang out
with drifters,
but when parents find out that students are working with global drifters,
their response
may be, "Oh, buoy!"
Starting next school year, kindergarten through 12th grade students will be
able to follow
the progress of about 150 drifting buoys set out in the Caribbean as part
of an
International Year of the Ocean project by the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric
Administration. The buoys will send messages about the temperature of the
sea, the
strength of the wind, and the direction of the ocean currents to a NOAA
satellite, which
will transmit the data via computer to any student who wants to follow
along on the
Web.
Satellites monitor such data as water temperature and ocean currents to
predict
weather patterns, or where pollutants are likely to flow. The buoys play an
important
role because the satellites can be fooled by dust plumes from the desert
and they need
the data from the buoys to confirm their data and to recalibrate satellite
equipment.
Fore more information, contact:
Mark Bushnell, 305-361-4353