Oden (icebreaker)

From SpottingWorld, the Hub for the SpottingWorld network...
Icebreaker Oden
Icebreaker Oden
Career (Sweden) Swedish flag
Name: Oden
Owner: Swedish Maritime Administration
Operator: Swedish Maritime Administration
Builder: Götaverken
Completed: 1988
Homeport: Norrköping
Status: In service
General characteristics
Type: Icebreaker
Tonnage: 9 438 GRT
Displacement: 13 000 tonnes
Length: 108.8 metres
Beam: 31.0 metres
Draft: 7.0 to 8.5 metres
Ice class: 1A1 Icebreaker
Installed power: 18.0 MW
Propulsion: Diesel mechanical
Speed: 16 knots
Range: 30 000 nautical miles
Endurance: 100 days
Capacity: 80 passengers and crew

The Oden is a large Swedish icebreaker, built in 1988 for the Swedish Maritime Administration. It is named after the asa god Odin. First built to clear a passage through the ice of the Baltic sea for cargo ships, it was later modified to serve as a research vessel. Equipped with its own helicopter and manned by 15 crew members it has ample capacity to carry laboratory equipment and 80 passengers, functioning independently in harsh Polar ice packs of the Arctic and Antarctic seas. It was the first non-nuclear surface vessel to reach the North Pole (in 1991).[1][2]

The Oden has participated in numerous scientific expeditions in the Canadian arctic archipelago.[3] The ship is currently involved in an Antarctic research project.[citation needed]

Expeditions

Oden Antarctic Expedition 2008

From November 25, 2008 to January 12, 2009 researcher Tish Yager and teacher Jeff Peneston as members of an international research team participated in an expedition on board of Oden Icebreaker collecting a range of data in rarely traveled areas of the Antarctic seas and coastline, including the Amundsen and eastern Ross Seas. They studied production and destruction of greenhouse gases and their effects on sea ice microorganisms. The study was designed to allow future researchers to better understand and monitor the Antarctic region. [4]

Oden Antarctic Expedition 2007

Lollie Garay a prominent teacher of Earth and Space Science at Redd School in Houston, Texas together with Drs. Robert Sherell and Walker Smith joined a team of international scientists on the Oden icebreaker. Dr. Sherell leading the US science group of the expedition is a professor at the Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences and Department of Geological Sciences at Rutgers University. He is well known for conducting research on primary producers and their distribution of trace elements in the water column of the ocean, while Dr. Walker Smith is a professor of Marine Science at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science who studies the year-to-year changes in the biology, physics, and chemistry of Antarctica's Ross Sea. The joint project was a co-operative endeavor between the Swedish Polar Research Secretariat and the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) to collect a range of data in rarely traveled areas of the Antarctic seas and coastline. On this voyage the international research team studied the oceanography and bio geochemistry of the region, with emphasis on the processes that control the growth and fate of phytoplankton in the ocean. [5]

References

External links

Commons-logo.svg
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
[[Commons: Category:Swedish Ice Breaker Oden

| Oden (icebreaker)

]]

Gallery

de:Oden (1989) eo:Oden (glacirompilo) sv:Oden (isbrytare)