Dive into Marine Science at UNH’s Ocean Discovery Day on September 29

Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Girl holds blue lobster at UNH Ocean Discovery Day.

Photo credit: Rebecca Irelan, NH Sea Grant

DURHAM, N.H. – Touch a horseshoe crab, map the ocean floor and drive a remotely operated vehicle at the University of New Hampshire’s Ocean Discovery Day on Saturday, Sept. 29, 2018. Ocean Discovery Day will provide visitors with an opportunity to explore the wonders of the sea through interactive exhibits and demonstrations at the Chase Ocean Engineering Laboratory on the UNH campus in Durham. The event is free to the public and runs from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Visitors can participate in a number of ocean-related activities that include making a fish print, viewing plankton that are an important base in the food chain, learning about marine snow and watching a SCUBA diving demonstration to learn how UNH scientists conduct research below the waves. Tour the building’s unique facilities, including a 20-foot-deep engineering tank, a 120-foot-long wave tank, a communications center that lets researchers connect with scientists at sea, and a large panoramic display that helps visualize underwater data like whale movements.

Ocean Discovery Day is hosted by the UNH School of Marine Science and Ocean Engineering, N.H. Sea Grant, Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping and the UNH Marine Docents. For more information, including directions, parking, and schedules of activities, go to https://marine.unh.edu/oceandiscoveryday/ or visit Ocean Discovery Day on Facebook.

The University of New Hampshire is a flagship research university that inspires innovation and transforms lives in our state, nation and world. More than 16,000 students from all 50 states and 71 countries engage with an award-winning faculty in top ranked programs in business, engineering, law, health and human services, liberal arts and the sciences across more than 200 programs of study. UNH’s research portfolio includes partnerships with NASA, NOAA, NSF and NIH, receiving more than $100 million in competitive external funding every year to further explore and define the frontiers of land, sea and space.