
Introduction
In its second decade plan, IR pledged its commitment to education outreach: reaching out to audiences outside of the scientific community. By investing the time, energy and resources necessary to build a successful E&O program, InterRidge will ensure that its message of responsible exploration and discovery of the world's deep ocean is heard by students, the future stewards of the environment worldwide; policy-makers; and other members of the general public. The hope is that reaching out, educating and motivating people to learn more about the mysteries of the deep sea - a place few will ever see in person - will engender a healthier respect for the Earth system at large.
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Click for PDF of IR Flier 2008 |
Upcoming Events
"Creatures of the Abyss" exhibit at Science North, Canada, to open in May 2009
Check back soon for a list of more outreach activities for 2009.
Current Events
FLEXE: Opportunity for ridge scientists to participate in secondary school education and outreach
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Visit the Extreme Deep exhibit at the Museon, in The Netherlands, Oct 2008 - May 2009. The exhibit title translates to "Discover the secrets of the deep sea." |
InterRidge Student and Postdoctoral Fellowship Program
Partnership with International Seabed Authority for Student and Postdoctoral Fellowship Program 2009 - 2011
Announcing our 2008 InterRidge Student Fellows!
Michelle Harris, a Ph.D. candidate at the National Oceanography Centre (NOC), UK, to work at a laboratory in Canada, and Kerry Howard, a Ph.D. candidate at Cardiff University, UK, to conduct research in France.
Click here for 2008 application procedure (deadline was 31 March 2008)
Recent Events
Opportunity for teachers and classrooms: Extreme 2008 cruise
InterRidge featured in Marine Scientist magazine: Click here for PDF of article in 2008
ESOF 2008
MATE International Student ROV Competition 2008
Announcing the InterRidge Awards for Hottest Hydrothermal Vent teams!
Education/Outreach Talk at AGU Fall Meeting 2007
From Local to Extreme Environments (FLEXE) is a project of the GLOBE earth science education program (http://www.globe.gov/fsl/html/templ.cgi?flexe&lang=en&nav=1). Through comparative protocols and online interactions with project scientists and partner schools, students will gain an understanding of local and the deep-sea environments, the interconnected Earth system, and the process of science. This project, led by Ridge 2000 and Pennsylvania State University in partnership with InterRidge, will be the focus of a talk at the AGU Fall Meeting.
ChEss Galapagos Meeting June 2007
Scientists first discovered volcanic hot vents surrounded by bizarre animals thriving in total darkness—without energy from the sun—at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean in 1977. At the end of June an international team of scientists, including many of the original explorers, will honor the 30th anniversary of the landmark discovery at a special meeting and public event in the Galápagos Islands, located just south of the discovery site. “The discovery of hydrothermal vents—ecosystems driven by chemical energy from the seafloor rather than energy from the sun—led to a fundamental change in our understanding of life on Earth,” said Paul Tyler, co-chair of ChEss, the group holding the meeting. ChEss is one of the 14 field programs of the Census of Marine Life, a global collaboration to document the ocean’s life by 2010.

