Page 2: of Marine Technology Magazine (January 2007)
Seafloor Engineering
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January 2007 contents
Marine Technology Reporter • Volume 50 Number 1
Deep Sea Mining 22 The Future is Now
Two companies — Nautilus Minerals and Neptune Minerals — are leading the charge to discover and recover valuable minerals from the bottom of the ocean. — by Maggie L. Merrill
Danger Below! 30 Subsea Explosive Hazards
The world's oceans are littered with unexploded munitions, remnants of war, military test ranges, trials and dumping grounds. As undersea technologies advance there has been a marked increase in the amount of explosive ordnance being discovered.
One company — Ramora — saw the need to address the matter before disaster strikes. — by David Welch
Wired 34 Meet L.O.R.I.
L.O.R.I. — ot Lighthouse Oceans Research Initiative — is reportedly the first Middle
East Cabled Seabed Observatory. — by Ken Du Vall
Number Crunchers 38 Deepwater Ops Study Launced for GOM
Ziff Energy group has launched the sixth edition of its Deepwater Reducing Field
Operation Costs study, to evaluate 2006 operating costs for more than two dozen deep- water producing assets in the Gulf of Mexico (GOM).
Pictured in the background is Seafloor Massive Sulphide inspected by Placer Dome geologists — on site Suzette field
PNG v2. (Photo Credit: Nautilus Minerals) 2 MTR January 2007
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