Welcome Aboard!

Dive Briefing

Research Tools

Meet the Scientists!

Andra Bobbitt
GIS/Research assistant

Christopher G. Fox
Chief Scientist of Our Cruise

Steve Hammond
Marine geophysicist

Jon Kaye
Microbiologist

Russell McDuff
Geochemist

Lauren Mullineaux
Benthic ecologist

Veronique Robigou
Geologist

Cindy Lee Van Dover
Biologist and former Pilot

Dana Yoerger
Head of Navigation

Fauna

Geology

Significance

Ethics

Unsolved Mysteries

InterActivities

Forum

Glossary

Acknowledgements & Sources

Studying hydrothermal vents requires a lot of impressive teamwork by many researchers. Our team includes specialists in marine geophysics, geology, geochemistry, benthic ecology, mechanical engineering, and geographic information systems.

In this section, you'll learn how each of the scientists contributes to the success of the cruise and how they prepared for their jobs. They are presented in alphabetical order, beginning with Andra Bobbitt.

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Andra Bobbitt
GIS/Research Assistant
Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory; Newport, Oregon

Andra Bobbitt
Photo courtesy of Andra Bobbitt




What are your responsibilities as a GIS/Research Assistant?

I'm the person that picks up the researcher's "parts", organizes and edits the pieces then puts them into a single basket. Our basket is a Geographic Information System (GIS) which allows the researchers to view their data in relationship to other scientists data both recently obtained and historical. Most of the work involves converting the data into a usable format (most original data is specific to the instrument it was obtained from) and verifying its accuracy.

As a faculty research assistant I also prepare publications for the public and journals, present work at conferences and consult with outside researchers working on similar projects. I usually go to sea each year as a participant on research expeditions. At sea I begin the data gathering and reformatting process, primarily with bathymetric and submersible navigation data.

How did you prepare for this job?

I obtained a scientific degree at a university which fortunately is home to the leading oceanographic institution in the nation, UCSD Scripps Institution of Oceanography. UCSD does not offer degrees in oceanography but its association with Scripps gave me opportunities to get involved with researchers while obtaining my general biology degree. Having a strong foundation in a general science which included math, statistics and computers was the key to having the flexibility to apply myself to working primarily in the marine geology field. Gaining experience with the ever changing computer world (software and hardware) as the technology in oceanography has also rapidly developed, has led me to advance in this exciting field.

"The ocean holds so many secrets which we need to unlock for our future generations and I can only hope that the world will give the innovative researchers the resources to make these discoveries."
--- Andra Bobbitt

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Meet our Chief Scientist! -->
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