The Geophysical and Oceanographic Station for Abyssal Research (GEOSTAR), an autonomous seafloor observatory that collects measurements benefiting a number of disciplines during missions up to 1 year long, will begin the second phase of its first mission in 2000. The 6-8 month investigation will take place at a depth of 3400 m in the southern Tyrrhenian basin of the southern Tyrrhenian basin of the central Mediterranean.
GEOSTAR was funded by the European Community (EC) for 2.4million(U.S.dollars)in1995asapartoftheMarineScienceandTechnologyprogramme(MAST).TheinnovativedeploymentandrecoveryprocedureGEOSTARuseswasderivedfromthe"two−module"conceptsuccessfullyappliedbyNASAintheApolloandspaceshuttlemissions,whereonemoduleperformstasksfortheother,includingdeployment,switchingonandoff,performingchecksandrecovery.Theobservatorycommunicationsystem,whichtakesadvantageofsatellitetelemetry,andthesimultaneousacquisitionofasetofvariousmeasurementswithauniquetimereferencemakeGEOSTARthefirstfundamentalelementofamultiparameteroceannetwork.GEOSTAR′sfirstscientificandtechnologicalmission,whichtookplaceinthesummerof1998intheAdriaticSea,verifiedtheperformanceandreliabilityofthesystem.Themissionwasasuccess.providing440hoursofcontinuousseismicmagneticandoceanographicdata.Thjesecondphaseofthemission,whichwasfundedbytheECfor2 million (US dollars), will carry equipment for chemical, biological and isotopic analyses not used in the first phase, which will broaden the data collection effort.Published45, 48-492.5. Laboratorio per lo sviluppo di sistemi di rilevamento sottomariniN/A or not JCRreserve