Fifty years ago, with the purchase and refit of a 200' pleasure yacht renamed the Vema, Maurice Ewing inaugurated Lamont's exploration of the largely unknown terrain beneath the world's oceans. Today, members of the Marine Geology and Geophysics (MG&G) Division remain explorers at heart, motivated by curiosity to understand these remote and forbidding parts of our planet. Over the years, the tools of exploration have improved from simple echosounders and towed seismic source-and-receiver instruments, to MultiChannel Seismic (MCS) Reflection techniques which allow us to probe more deeply into the Earth, and multibeam bathymetric and side-looking sonar imagers for mapping large areas of the seafloor in ever greater detail.  > more

Borehole Research Group

Borehole Research Group (BRG) participates in a number of research projects involving both land and sea downhole logging operations.

 

SedDB - Data Collection for Marine Sediment Geochemistry

SedDB’s goal is to maximize the use of sedimentary geochemical data for the widest possible range of research topics and in educational applications, and to facilitate their integration with other data types, promoting cross-disciplinary research.

Marine Geoscience Data System: MGDS

The Marine Geoscience Data System (MGDS) provides access to data portals for the NSF-supported Ridge 2000 and MARGINS programs, the Antarctic and Ridge Multibeam Bathymetry Synthesis projects, and the Seismic Reflection Field Data Center.