Welcome to the web site for Sediment and Solute Transport on Rivers and Margins (SSTORM) Research Group! Reide Corbett and J.P. Walsh from East Carolina University and the UNC Coastal Studies Institute lead the team.
Check out our research in/on wetlands, estuaries, barrier islands, shelves and groundwater.

Monday, August 22, 2011

Eye on Irene: Watch Out for the First Atlantic Hurricane This Season

Although Hurricane Irene doesn't have an impressive structure (e.g., an eye) at the moment, this sizable storm is forecast to stregthen to a Category 3 storm in a few days.  Models of this system (as shown above) disagree on the landfalling future of this system, but the coast of North Carolina will certainly experience effects and could be where Irene comes ashore.  Residents need to get prepared for potentially a Major (Cat 3+) hurricane.

Friday, August 12, 2011

A Successful Cruise: Thanks to the Captain and Crew

Dale, the Captain, at work.  He and the Chief Mate, Bobby, and the Second Mate, Larry, helped us get where we needed to go and sample the seabed.

Tina (left, Marine Tech), Mark (center, Chief Enginner), and Robert (right, Asst. Engineer) stand ready to help with docking...and are glad to get rid of us!  The were all always will to help answer questions or fix equipment.



Bob, the Steward, serves up a meal of yummy smoked ham for dinner.

Stephen, an Able Seaman, along with the other deck crew, John (theBosun) and Mark (a fill-in Able Seaman), kept a careful watch on the deck operations...and also helped with keep everything clean with the hose! 

8 August

It was a pleasure to return to the Gulf of Mexico and specifically to work aboard the R/V Cape Hatteras.  The weather cooperated, making the seabed sampling easy, and the Captain and crew helped us collect all the samples we could in the short time we were allocated.  The students worked tremendously hard, and Bob, the Steward, kept us well fed and hydrated.  It was a very successful trip, and we now have an impressive number of samples to investigate the record of the Mississippi River flood and other events (e.g., Hurricane Katrina) that have impacted the Gulf system.

Once we hit the dock our stuff was packed and ready for unloading.  What took us days to set up and collect, was packed into our vehicles within a couple hours.  We have a long drive back, but we're glad were returning with a large load of samples!

I'll wrap up the blogging for this cruise by saying a huge thanks to Dale (the Captain who oversaw the mud mayhem and effortlessly guided us to many sites including those in some tough locations), Bobby and Larry (the Mates who navigated us to countless core locations and helped us sample the many sites), Mark and Robert (the Engineers who kept the ship running smoothly and the A/C pumping!...both are critical in the Gulf!), Bob (the Steward who filled our bellies with many meals), Tina (the Marine Tech who ressurected the CTD and assisted with our many needs), and of course, John, Steve and Mark (who worked with closely on deck, watching for our safety and tolerating our muddy mess, and all the while did this with smiles and a sense of humor).  The Cape Hatteras is a special ship, which can really do it all, from coring sites where a person can stand (almost) to sampling the water and seabed at great depths.  One of the reason the ship is so capable is the experienced, hard-working and amiable crew.  I also need to thank the fabulous group of students who worked long hours on this cruise and made the trip extra enjoyable.  Additionally, my co-investigators were a pleasure to go to sea with, and I hope we can find future opportunities to work together.  THANKS! J.P. 

Monday, August 8, 2011

In the name of science...

If you look close, you'll notice that the daywalkers are working together with the mud-sucking Vampire Shift. That's right, it's one big scientific family as we work to meet our final goal of stations before we have to start steaming to port (Gulfport). It has been a quick cruise, but everyone (scientist an crew alike) has worked hard to get the job done.

We will collect our last core in about an hour…that will make 68 cores! Thanks to everyone for a job well done. Now it's time for the real work…to the lab!

Sunday, August 7, 2011

The Sunshine Shift Shines

The Sunshine Shift (Kevin, Devon, Jessica, David, Alisha, Reide)

Having a little fun during a very long day.
7 August

While the day watch (Noon-Midnight) has had the luxury of working during relatively normal hours of the day.  I must admit they have worked extremely hard and have had fun doing it.  They have collected and processed a ton of cores, and they have worked in intense heat, sweating like dogs and covered in mud.  They mean business, but make the work fun by talking, singing, and occasionally, dancing.   They have had some very tough days, and we have to thank them for a lot of our progress.

Nice job.

Many Jobs on Watch

Devon cleans off an x-ray tray.

Reide, Jessica and David cut yet another core.

J.P. prepares a multicore tube.


Devon (right) and David (left) clean off a sediment tray before x-raying.
7 August

During a watch there are a variety of jobs that need to be done, including sample recording, coring/ctd operations, cleaning, sieving, filtering, erosion chamber monitoring and interaction with the Captain and mates.   Some example photos are above.