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m Llammakey moved page NOAAS Chapman (R 446) to NOAAS Chapman without leaving a redirect: per WP:NC-SHIPS, only ship of name, no need for disambiguation
 
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{{Short description|American fisheries research vessel}}
{|{{Infobox ship begin}}
{|{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image
{{Infobox ship image
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{{Infobox ship career
{{Infobox ship career
|Hide header=
|Hide header=
|Ship country=National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
|Ship country=United States
|Ship flag={{USN flag|1998}} [[File:NOAA Flag.svg|60px]]
|Ship flag={{USN flag|1998}} [[File:NOAA Flag.svg|60px]]
|Ship name=NOAAS ''Chapman'' (R 446)
|Ship name=NOAAS ''Chapman'' (R 446)
|Ship namesake=[[Wilbert McLeod Chapman]] (1910-1970), American [[Fishery|fisheries]] scientist<ref name="decommissioning"/><ref>[http://socialarchive.iath.virginia.edu/xtf/view?docId=chapman-wilbert-mcleod-1910-1970-cr.xml virginia.edu Chapman, Wilbert McLeod, 1910-1970]</ref>
|Ship namesake=[[Wilbert McLeod Chapman|Wilbert McLeod "Wib" Chapman]] (1910-1970), American [[Fishery|fisheries]] scientist<ref name="decommissioning"/><ref>[http://socialarchive.iath.virginia.edu/xtf/view?docId=chapman-wilbert-mcleod-1910-1970-cr.xml virginia.edu Chapman, Wilbert McLeod, 1910-1970]</ref>
|Ship owner=
|Ship owner=
|Ship operator=
|Ship operator=
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|Ship awarded=
|Ship awarded=
|Ship builder=[[Bender Shipbuilding and Repair Company]], [[Mobile, Alabama|Mobile]], [[Alabama]]
|Ship builder=[[Bender Shipbuilding and Repair Company]], [[Mobile, Alabama|Mobile]], [[Alabama]]
|Ship original cost=$3,100,000 ([[USD]])<ref>[http://www.shipbuildinghistory.com/history/smallships/noaa2.htm shipbuildinghistory.com NOAA Vessels (Since 1970)]</ref>
|Ship original cost=$3,100,000 ([[USD]])<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.shipbuildinghistory.com/history/smallships/noaa2.htm |title=shipbuildinghistory.com NOAA Vessels (Since 1970) |access-date=2014-06-07 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140107100626/http://www.shipbuildinghistory.com/history/smallships/noaa2.htm |archive-date=2014-01-07 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
|Ship yard number=
|Ship yard number=
|Ship way number=
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|Ship reinstated=
|Ship reinstated=
|Ship homeport=[[Pascagoula, Mississippi|Pascagoula]], [[Mississippi]]
|Ship homeport=[[Pascagoula, Mississippi|Pascagoula]], [[Mississippi]]
|Ship identification=Call sign WTED
|Ship identification=*{{IMO Number|7907051}}
*{{MMSI Number|306082000}}
*[[Maritime call sign|Callsign]]: WTED
|Ship motto=
|Ship motto=
|Ship nickname=
|Ship nickname=
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|Ship honors=
|Ship honors=
|Ship captured=
|Ship captured=
|Ship fate=Donated to [[University of Puerto Rico]]<br/>Purchased by [[Substation Curaçao]] 2008
|Ship fate=*Donated to [[University of Puerto Rico]]
*Purchased by [[Substation Curaçao]] 2008
|Ship status=
|Ship notes=
|Ship notes=
|Ship badge=
|Ship badge=
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|Ship class=
|Ship class=
|Ship type=[[Fishery|Fisheries]] [[research ship]]
|Ship type=[[Fishery|Fisheries]] [[research ship]]
|Ship tonnage=427 [[gross ton]]s<br/>290 [[net ton]]s
|Ship tonnage=*427 [[gross ton]]s
*290 [[net ton]]s
|Ship displacement=52 [[Displacement ton|ton]]s
|Ship displacement=520 [[Displacement ton|ton]]s
|Ship tons burthen=
|Ship length={{convert|127|ft|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship length={{convert|127|ft|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship beam={{convert|29.6|ft|m|abbr=on}}
|Ship beam={{convert|29.6|ft|m|abbr=on}}
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== Construction and commissioning ==
== Construction and commissioning ==
[[File:NOAAS Chapman (R 446) launching ceremony.jpg|200px|left|thumb|The [[Ship naming and launching|launching]] ceremony for NOAAS ''Chapman'' (R 446) at the [[Bender Shipbuilding and Repair Company]] in [[Mobile, Alabama|Mobile]], [[Alabama]], in December 1979.]]''Chapman'' was built by the [[Bender Shipbuilding and Repair Company]] at [[Mobile, Alabama|Mobile]], [[Alabama]]. She was [[Ship naming and launching|launched]] in December 1979, delivered to NOAA in May 1980, and [[Ship commissioning|commissioned]] into service in NOAA{{'}}s fleet as '''NOAAS ''Chapman'' (R 446)'''<ref name="noaaships">[http://archive.org/stream/shipsofnoaafleet00rock/shipsofnoaafleet00rock_djvu.txt ''Ships of the NOAA Fleet'', Rockville, Maryland: United States Department of Commerce, June 1989]</ref> on 11 July 1980 at NOAA{{'}}s Pacific Marine Center in [[Seattle, Washington|Seattle]] [[Washington (U.S. state)|Washington]].<ref name="decommissioning">[http://www.moc.noaa.gov/ch/decomm/decomm.htm NOAA Ship CHAPMAN Decommissioned After 19 Years Of Service]</ref>
[[File:NOAAS Chapman (R 446) launching ceremony.jpg|200px|left|thumb|The [[Ship naming and launching|launching]] ceremony for NOAAS ''Chapman'' (R 446) at the [[Bender Shipbuilding and Repair Company]] in [[Mobile, Alabama|Mobile]], [[Alabama]], in December 1979.]]''Chapman'' was built by the [[Bender Shipbuilding and Repair Company]] at [[Mobile, Alabama|Mobile]], [[Alabama]]. She was [[Ship naming and launching|launched]] in December 1979, delivered to NOAA in May 1980, and [[Ship commissioning|commissioned]] into service in NOAA{{'}}s fleet as '''NOAAS ''Chapman'' (R 446)'''<ref name="noaaships">[https://archive.org/stream/shipsofnoaafleet00rock/shipsofnoaafleet00rock_djvu.txt ''Ships of the NOAA Fleet'', Rockville, Maryland: United States Department of Commerce, June 1989]</ref> on 11 July 1980 at NOAA{{'}}s Pacific Marine Center in [[Seattle, Washington|Seattle]] [[Washington (U.S. state)|Washington]].<ref name="decommissioning">[http://www.moc.noaa.gov/ch/decomm/decomm.htm NOAA Ship CHAPMAN Decommissioned After 19 Years Of Service]</ref>


== Characteristics and capabilities ==
== Characteristics and capabilities ==
''Chapman'' had a 4-foot (1.2-meter) fixed-length boom with a lifting capacity of 7,500 pounds (3,402 [[Kilogram|kg]]) and an [[A-frame]] with a safe working load of 1,000 pounds (454&nbsp;kg). She also had two [[hydraulic]] [[Trawling|trawl]] [[winch]]es, each with a drum capacity of 6,000 feet (1,829 meters) of 3/4-inch (19-mm) line and a maximum pull of 20,000 pounds (9,072&nbsp;kg), a hydraulic net [[Sonde (electronics)|sonde]] winch with a drum capcity of 3,937 feet (1,200 meters) and a maximum pull of 500 pounds (227&nbsp;kg), and a hydraulic [[Oceanography|oceanographic]] winch with a drum capacity of 3,250 feet (991 meters) of 3/16-inch (4.8-mm) steel cable and a maximum pull of 84 pounds (38.1&nbsp;kg).<ref name="noaaships"/>
''Chapman'' had a {{convert|4|ft|m|abbr=off|sp=us|adj=on}} fixed-length boom with a lifting capacity of 7,500 pounds (3,402 [[Kilogram|kg]]) and an [[A-frame]] with a safe working load of {{convert|1,000|lb|kg}}. She also had two [[hydraulic]] [[Trawling|trawl]] [[winch]]es, each with a drum capacity of {{convert|6,000|ft|m|abbr=off|sp=us}} of 3/4-inch (19-mm) line and a maximum pull of {{convert|20,000|lb|kg}}, a hydraulic net [[CTD (instrument)|sonde]] winch with a drum capacity of {{convert|3,937|ft|m|abbr=off|sp=us}} and a maximum pull of {{convert|500|lb|kg}}, and a hydraulic [[Oceanography|oceanographic]] winch with a drum capacity of {{convert|3,250|ft|m|abbr=off|sp=us}} of 3/16-inch (4.8-mm) steel cable and a maximum pull of {{convert|84|lb|kg}}.<ref name="noaaships"/>


''Chapman'' carried a 16-foot (4.9-meter) [[Boston Whaler]] [[fiberglass]] boat powered by a [[gasoline]] [[outboard motor]].<ref name="noaaships"/>
''Chapman'' carried a {{convert|16|ft|m|abbr=off|sp=us|adj=on}} [[Boston Whaler]] [[fiberglass]] boat powered by a [[gasoline]] [[outboard motor]].<ref name="noaaships"/>


In addition to her crew of 11, ''Chapman'' could accommodate up to six scientists.<ref name="noaaships"/>
In addition to her crew of 11, ''Chapman'' could accommodate up to six scientists.<ref name="noaaships"/>
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Operated by NOAA{{'}}s Office of Marine and Aviation Operations, ''Chapman'' conducted fishery and marine resource research supporting the research of NOAA's [[National Marine Fisheries Service]] (NMFS), collecting [[fish]] and [[crustacean]] specimens using [[Trawling|trawls]] and [[Benthic zone|benthic]] [[Longline fishing|longlines]] and fish larvae, fish eggs, and [[plankton]] using plankton nets and surface and midwater larval nets.<ref name="noaamoc">[http://www.moc.noaa.gov/Decomm%20Ships/ch-index.html NOAA Ship ''Chapman'']</ref>
Operated by NOAA{{'}}s Office of Marine and Aviation Operations, ''Chapman'' conducted fishery and marine resource research supporting the research of NOAA's [[National Marine Fisheries Service]] (NMFS), collecting [[fish]] and [[crustacean]] specimens using [[Trawling|trawls]] and [[Benthic zone|benthic]] [[Longline fishing|longlines]] and fish larvae, fish eggs, and [[plankton]] using plankton nets and surface and midwater larval nets.<ref name="noaamoc">[http://www.moc.noaa.gov/Decomm%20Ships/ch-index.html NOAA Ship ''Chapman'']</ref>


''Chapman'' spent her first four years operating in the [[North Pacific Ocean]] and [[Bering Sea]] on a variety of projects support of NMFS{{'}}s Northwest Fisheries Science Center and Alaska Fisheries Science Center. She conducted a survey of the Bering Sea [[king crab]] population each summer which was used to set king crab catch quotas for the following autumn.<ref name="decommissioning"/>
''Chapman'' spent her first four years operating in the [[North Pacific Ocean]] and [[Bering Sea]] on a variety of projects in support of NMFS{{'}}s Northwest Fisheries Science Center and Alaska Fisheries Science Center. She conducted a survey of the Bering Sea [[king crab]] population each summer which was used to set king crab catch quotas for the following autumn.<ref name="decommissioning"/>


In November 1984, ''Chapman'' moved to her new [[home port]] at [[Pascagoula, Mississippi|Pascagoula]], [[Mississippi]], and for the remainder of her NOAA career she was devoted exclusively to supporting the Pascagoula Laboratory at NMFS{{'}}s Southeast Fisheries Science Center, operating in the [[Gulf of Mexico]], [[Caribbean Sea]], and western [[Atlantic Ocean]]. Her first assignment was to explore the fishery potential of underutilized stocks of [[Gulf butterfish]], [[squid]], and coastal [[herring]]. In work closely connected with the emerging field of [[satellite imagery]] data acquisition and its application in [[fisheries science]], she located commercially valuable concentrations of these species and characterized and monitored their populations.<ref name="decommissioning"/>
In November 1984, ''Chapman'' moved to her new [[home port]] at [[Pascagoula, Mississippi|Pascagoula]], [[Mississippi]], and for the remainder of her NOAA career she was devoted exclusively to supporting the Pascagoula Laboratory at NMFS{{'}}s Southeast Fisheries Science Center, operating in the [[Gulf of Mexico]], [[Caribbean Sea]], and western [[Atlantic Ocean]]. Her first assignment was to explore the fishery potential of underutilized stocks of [[Gulf butterfish]], [[squid]], and coastal [[herring]]. In work closely connected with the emerging field of [[satellite imagery]] data acquisition and its application in [[fisheries science]], she located commercially valuable concentrations of these species and characterized and monitored their populations.<ref name="decommissioning"/>


During her career, ''Chapman'' [[Dredging|dredged]] for [[scallop]]s and [[Trawling|trawled]] for [[cod]] off the coast of [[New England]], and conducted winter tagging of [[striped bass]] off the [[Outer Banks]] of [[North Carolina]]. She also made physical oceanographic measurements and [[plankton]] collections in the [[Gulf Stream]] and the [[Loop Current]], collected [[red tide]] organisms, and observed [[marine mammal]]s.<ref name="decommissioning"/>
During her career, ''Chapman'' [[Marine biology dredge|dredged]] for [[scallop]]s and [[Trawling|trawled]] for [[cod]] off the coast of [[New England]], and conducted winter tagging of [[striped bass]] off the [[Outer Banks]] of [[North Carolina]]. She also made physical oceanographic measurements and [[plankton]] collections in the [[Gulf Stream]] and the [[Loop Current]], collected [[red tide]] organisms, and observed [[marine mammal]]s.<ref name="decommissioning"/>


''Chapman'' also tested new designs in fishing gear and the sensors and equipment used to measure and monitor fishing gear performance, and used towed &ndash; and later remnotely operated &ndash; submersibles to observe the performance of fishing gear she was testing. Scientist embarked on ''Chapman'' pioneered and developed the capability to measure fish populations using fishery [[acoustic]] systems. During her later years, ''Chapman'' used fishery acoustic systems to locate spawning aggregations og [[grouper]] and tcharacterize [[reef fish]] habitats during annual surveys under the Southeast Area Monitoring and Assessment Program (SEAMAP).<ref name="decommissioning"/>
''Chapman'' also tested new designs in fishing gear and the sensors and equipment used to measure and monitor fishing gear performance, and used towed &ndash; and later remotely operated &ndash; submersibles to observe the performance of fishing gear she was testing. Scientists embarked on ''Chapman'' pioneered and developed the capability to measure fish populations using fishery [[Acoustics|acoustic]] systems. During her later years, ''Chapman'' used fishery acoustic systems to locate spawning aggregations of [[grouper]] and to characterize [[reef fish]] habitats during annual surveys under the Southeast Area Monitoring and Assessment Program (SEAMAP).<ref name="decommissioning"/>


As an alternative to the often-destruction methods of [[trawling]] and dredging, scientists aboard ''Chapman'' pioneered the use of fixed video cameras deployed on sensitive [[reef]] habitats to collect information on the kinds and abundance of reef fishes in a non-destructive manner, a novel approach in fishery data collection. Employing this technique off the Atlantic coast of [[Florida]], ''Chapman'' conducted baseline studies of [[coral reef]]s that led to the establishment of the [[Experimental Oculina Research Reserve]], one of the first such reserves of its kind.<ref name="decommissioning"/>
As an alternative to the often environmentally damaging methods of [[trawling]] and [[Marine biology dredge|dredging]], scientists aboard ''Chapman'' pioneered the use of fixed video cameras deployed on sensitive [[reef]] habitats to collect information on the kinds and abundance of reef fishes in a non-destructive manner, a novel approach in fishery data collection. Employing this technique off the Atlantic coast of [[Florida]], ''Chapman'' conducted baseline studies of [[coral reef]]s that led to the establishment of the [[Experimental Oculina Research Reserve]], one of the first such reserves of its kind.<ref name="decommissioning"/>


After nearly 18 years of service, ''Chapman'' was [[Ship decommissioning|decommissioned]] at Pascagoula on 2 June 1998.<ref name="noaamoc"/> She was replaced by [[NOAAS Gordon Gunter (R 336)|NOAAS ''Gordon Gunter'' (R 336)]].<ref name="noaamoc"/>
After nearly 18 years of service, ''Chapman'' was [[Ship decommissioning|decommissioned]] at Pascagoula on 2 June 1998.<ref name="noaamoc"/> She was replaced by [[NOAAS Gordon Gunter (R 336)|NOAAS ''Gordon Gunter'' (R 336)]].<ref name="noaamoc"/><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.publicaffairs.noaa.gov/nr/pdf/sept1998.pdf |title=Anonymous, "NOAA Commissions New Fisheries Ship in Pascagoula; Honors Gulf Scientist," ''NOAA Report'', Vol. VII, No. 9, September 1998, p. 2. |access-date=2014-08-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924083032/http://www.publicaffairs.noaa.gov/nr/pdf/sept1998.pdf |archive-date=2015-09-24 |url-status=dead }}</ref>


==Later career==
==Later career==


Donated to the [[University of Puerto Rico]], the ship continued to serve as a research vessel as '''R/V ''Chapman''''', taking scientists and students to sea under the auspcies of the university to conduct various kinds of marine research. However, she was not properly maintained, and after less than six years she lost her [[American Bureau of Shipping]] safety rating and was taken out of service.<ref name="substation">[http://www.substation-curacao.com/chapman/ Substation Curaçao: Champman]</ref>
Donated to the [[University of Puerto Rico]], the ship continued to serve as a research vessel as '''R/V ''Chapman''''', taking scientists and students to sea under the auspices of the university to conduct various kinds of marine research. However, she was not properly maintained, and after less than six years she lost her [[American Bureau of Shipping]] safety rating and was taken out of service.<ref name="substation">{{Cite web |url=http://www.substation-curacao.com/chapman/ |title=Substation Curaçao: Champman |access-date=2014-06-07 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140714145153/http://www.substation-curacao.com/chapman/ |archive-date=2014-07-14 |url-status=dead }}</ref>


In 2008, [[Substation Curaçao]] purchased ''Chapman'' to refurbish her and modify her for use as a seagoing mothership for the deep-diving scientific and tourist [[submarine]] ''[[Curasub]]''. Modifications involved the installation of amenities for embarked scientists and tourists and of a 110-ton knuckle boom [[Crane (machine)|crane]] on ''Chapman''{{'}} after deck to launch and retrieve both the submarine and its floating dock, both of which can be carried on ''Chapman''{{'}}s after deck. During submarine operations, the floating dock is lowered over the side and secured to ''Chapman'' so that ''Curasub''{{'}}s passengers have an easy and convenient way to embark on and disembark from the submarine without the danger of launching ''Curasub'' into the water with them already aboard; ''Curasub'' also is lowered over the side and operates from the floating dock, which includes a docking cradle for the submarine. ''Chapman''{{'}}s redesign also made provision for the temporary installation of two 20-foot (6.1-meter) [[intermodal container]]s, one configured for use as a [[wet laboratory]] and the other for use as a dry laboratiory, which can be carried on her deck when needed for the support of embarked scientists and stored ashore during tourist use of ''Curasub''.<ref name="substation"/><ref>[http://www.royalseaquariumresort.com/Newsletter%20Volume%201,%20Issue%201%20(december%202012).pdf Substation Curaçao-Chapman Research Centre newsletter, Volume I, No. 1, December 2012 ]</ref>
In 2008, [[Substation Curaçao]] purchased ''Chapman'' to refurbish her and modify her for use as a seagoing mothership for the deep-diving scientific and tourist [[submarine]] ''[[Curasub]]''. Modifications involved the installation of amenities for embarked scientists and tourists and of a 110-ton knuckle boom [[Crane (machine)|crane]] on ''Chapman''{{'}}s after deck to launch and retrieve both the submarine and its floating dock, both of which can be carried on ''Chapman''{{'}}s after deck. During submarine operations, the floating dock is lowered over the side and secured to ''Chapman'' so that ''Curasub''{{'}}s passengers have an easy and convenient way to embark on and disembark from the submarine without the danger of launching ''Curasub'' into the water with them already aboard; ''Curasub'' also is lowered over the side and operates from the floating dock, which includes a docking cradle for the submarine. ''Chapman''{{'}}s redesign also made provision for the temporary installation of two {{convert|20|ft|m|abbr=off|sp=us|adj=on}} [[intermodal container]]s, one configured for use as a [[wet laboratory]] and the other for use as a dry laboratory, which can be carried on her deck when needed for the support of embarked scientists and stored ashore during tourist use of ''Curasub''.<ref name="substation"/><ref>[http://www.royalseaquariumresort.com/Newsletter%20Volume%201,%20Issue%201%20(december%202012).pdf Substation Curaçao-Chapman Research Centre newsletter, Volume I, No. 1, December 2012 ]</ref>


Operating from [[Curaçao]], ''Chapman'' had begun operations as ''Curasub''{{'}}s mothership by mid-2013.<ref>[http://gizmodo.com/the-curasub-live-the-life-aquatic-without-getting-wet-510532840 Tarantolo, Andrew, "The Curasub: Live the Life Aquatic Without Getting Wet," Gizmodo, 06/03/13 11:30 a.m.]</ref>
Operating from [[Curaçao]], ''Chapman'' had begun operations under [[Chapman Expeditions]] serving as ''Curasub''{{'}}s mothership by 2012, when she supported the [[Smithsonian Institution]]'s [[Deep Reef Observation Project]] (DROP).<ref name=Tarantolo2013>[https://gizmodo.com/the-curasub-live-the-life-aquatic-without-getting-wet-510532840 Tarantolo, Andrew, "The Curasub: Live the Life Aquatic Without Getting Wet," Gizmodo, 06/03/13 11:30 a.m.]</ref><ref name=RRR10407>{{cite journal |author=Baldwin, CC |title=Deep Reef Observation Project (DROP): A Smithsonian - substation Curaçao collaboration |journal=In: Lang, M.A., and M.D.J. Sayer, editors. 2013. Proceedings of the 2013 AAUS/ESDP Curaçao Joint International Scientific Diving Symposium, October 24–27, 2013, Curaçao. Dauphin Island, AL |publisher=[[American Academy of Underwater Sciences]] |year=2013 |url=http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/10407 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20140709085244/http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/10407 |url-status=usurped |archive-date=July 9, 2014 |accessdate=2014-07-06}}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
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== References ==
== References ==

{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


==External links==
{{DISPLAYTITLE:NOAAS ''Chapman'' (R 446)}}
* {{Commons category-inline}}

{{University of Puerto Rico}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Chapman}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Chapman}}
[[Category:Ships of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration]]
[[Category:Ships of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration|Chapman]]
[[Category:Research vessels of the United States]]
[[Category:Ships built in Mobile, Alabama|Chapman]]
[[Category:Ships built in Alabama]]
[[Category:1979 ships|Chapman]]
[[Category:1979 ships]]
[[Category:Fisheries science|NOAAS Chapman]]
[[Category:Fisheries science]]
[[Category:University of Puerto Rico|NOAAS Chapman]]
[[Category:University of Puerto Rico system]]
[[Category:Ships of Curaçao|NOAAS Chapman]]
[[Category:Curaçao]]
[[Category:Research vessels]]

Latest revision as of 17:28, 4 May 2023

NOAAS Chapman (R 446)
History
United States
NameNOAAS Chapman (R 446)
NamesakeWilbert McLeod "Wib" Chapman (1910-1970), American fisheries scientist[1][2]
BuilderBender Shipbuilding and Repair Company, Mobile, Alabama
Cost$3,100,000 (USD)[3]
LaunchedDecember 1979
AcquiredMay 1980 (delivery)
Commissioned11 July 1980
Decommissioned2 June 1998
HomeportPascagoula, Mississippi
Identification
Fate
General characteristics
TypeFisheries research ship
Tonnage
Displacement520 tons
Length127 ft (39 m)
Beam29.6 ft (9.0 m)
Draft14.0 ft (4.3 m)
PropulsionOne 1,250-shp (932-kW) D 339 geared diesel engine, one four-bladed controllable-pitch propeller, one 150-hp (112-kW) Omnithruster bow thruster
Speed9 knots (17 km/h)
Range3,020 nautical miles (5,590 km)
Endurance14 days
Boats & landing
craft carried
One 16 ft (4.9 m) open boat
Complement11, plus up to 6 scientists

NOAAS Chapman (R 446) was an American fisheries research vessel that was in commission in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) fleet from 1980 to 1998. After the conclusion of her NOAA career, she spent several years operating as the University of Puerto Rico marine research vessel R/V Chapman. More recently, she has become the Curaçao-based mothership for the deep-diving submarine Curasub.

Construction and commissioning

[edit]
The launching ceremony for NOAAS Chapman (R 446) at the Bender Shipbuilding and Repair Company in Mobile, Alabama, in December 1979.

Chapman was built by the Bender Shipbuilding and Repair Company at Mobile, Alabama. She was launched in December 1979, delivered to NOAA in May 1980, and commissioned into service in NOAA's fleet as NOAAS Chapman (R 446)[4] on 11 July 1980 at NOAA's Pacific Marine Center in Seattle Washington.[1]

Characteristics and capabilities

[edit]

Chapman had a 4-foot (1.2-meter) fixed-length boom with a lifting capacity of 7,500 pounds (3,402 kg) and an A-frame with a safe working load of 1,000 pounds (450 kg). She also had two hydraulic trawl winches, each with a drum capacity of 6,000 feet (1,800 meters) of 3/4-inch (19-mm) line and a maximum pull of 20,000 pounds (9,100 kg), a hydraulic net sonde winch with a drum capacity of 3,937 feet (1,200 meters) and a maximum pull of 500 pounds (230 kg), and a hydraulic oceanographic winch with a drum capacity of 3,250 feet (990 meters) of 3/16-inch (4.8-mm) steel cable and a maximum pull of 84 pounds (38 kg).[4]

Chapman carried a 16-foot (4.9-meter) Boston Whaler fiberglass boat powered by a gasoline outboard motor.[4]

In addition to her crew of 11, Chapman could accommodate up to six scientists.[4]

Service history

[edit]

Operated by NOAA's Office of Marine and Aviation Operations, Chapman conducted fishery and marine resource research supporting the research of NOAA's National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), collecting fish and crustacean specimens using trawls and benthic longlines and fish larvae, fish eggs, and plankton using plankton nets and surface and midwater larval nets.[5]

Chapman spent her first four years operating in the North Pacific Ocean and Bering Sea on a variety of projects in support of NMFS's Northwest Fisheries Science Center and Alaska Fisheries Science Center. She conducted a survey of the Bering Sea king crab population each summer which was used to set king crab catch quotas for the following autumn.[1]

In November 1984, Chapman moved to her new home port at Pascagoula, Mississippi, and for the remainder of her NOAA career she was devoted exclusively to supporting the Pascagoula Laboratory at NMFS's Southeast Fisheries Science Center, operating in the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean Sea, and western Atlantic Ocean. Her first assignment was to explore the fishery potential of underutilized stocks of Gulf butterfish, squid, and coastal herring. In work closely connected with the emerging field of satellite imagery data acquisition and its application in fisheries science, she located commercially valuable concentrations of these species and characterized and monitored their populations.[1]

During her career, Chapman dredged for scallops and trawled for cod off the coast of New England, and conducted winter tagging of striped bass off the Outer Banks of North Carolina. She also made physical oceanographic measurements and plankton collections in the Gulf Stream and the Loop Current, collected red tide organisms, and observed marine mammals.[1]

Chapman also tested new designs in fishing gear and the sensors and equipment used to measure and monitor fishing gear performance, and used towed – and later remotely operated – submersibles to observe the performance of fishing gear she was testing. Scientists embarked on Chapman pioneered and developed the capability to measure fish populations using fishery acoustic systems. During her later years, Chapman used fishery acoustic systems to locate spawning aggregations of grouper and to characterize reef fish habitats during annual surveys under the Southeast Area Monitoring and Assessment Program (SEAMAP).[1]

As an alternative to the often environmentally damaging methods of trawling and dredging, scientists aboard Chapman pioneered the use of fixed video cameras deployed on sensitive reef habitats to collect information on the kinds and abundance of reef fishes in a non-destructive manner, a novel approach in fishery data collection. Employing this technique off the Atlantic coast of Florida, Chapman conducted baseline studies of coral reefs that led to the establishment of the Experimental Oculina Research Reserve, one of the first such reserves of its kind.[1]

After nearly 18 years of service, Chapman was decommissioned at Pascagoula on 2 June 1998.[5] She was replaced by NOAAS Gordon Gunter (R 336).[5][6]

Later career

[edit]

Donated to the University of Puerto Rico, the ship continued to serve as a research vessel as R/V Chapman, taking scientists and students to sea under the auspices of the university to conduct various kinds of marine research. However, she was not properly maintained, and after less than six years she lost her American Bureau of Shipping safety rating and was taken out of service.[7]

In 2008, Substation Curaçao purchased Chapman to refurbish her and modify her for use as a seagoing mothership for the deep-diving scientific and tourist submarine Curasub. Modifications involved the installation of amenities for embarked scientists and tourists and of a 110-ton knuckle boom crane on Chapman's after deck to launch and retrieve both the submarine and its floating dock, both of which can be carried on Chapman's after deck. During submarine operations, the floating dock is lowered over the side and secured to Chapman so that Curasub's passengers have an easy and convenient way to embark on and disembark from the submarine without the danger of launching Curasub into the water with them already aboard; Curasub also is lowered over the side and operates from the floating dock, which includes a docking cradle for the submarine. Chapman's redesign also made provision for the temporary installation of two 20-foot (6.1-meter) intermodal containers, one configured for use as a wet laboratory and the other for use as a dry laboratory, which can be carried on her deck when needed for the support of embarked scientists and stored ashore during tourist use of Curasub.[7][8]

Operating from Curaçao, Chapman had begun operations under Chapman Expeditions serving as Curasub's mothership by 2012, when she supported the Smithsonian Institution's Deep Reef Observation Project (DROP).[9][10]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g NOAA Ship CHAPMAN Decommissioned After 19 Years Of Service
  2. ^ virginia.edu Chapman, Wilbert McLeod, 1910-1970
  3. ^ "shipbuildinghistory.com NOAA Vessels (Since 1970)". Archived from the original on 2014-01-07. Retrieved 2014-06-07.
  4. ^ a b c d Ships of the NOAA Fleet, Rockville, Maryland: United States Department of Commerce, June 1989
  5. ^ a b c NOAA Ship Chapman
  6. ^ "Anonymous, "NOAA Commissions New Fisheries Ship in Pascagoula; Honors Gulf Scientist," NOAA Report, Vol. VII, No. 9, September 1998, p. 2" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2014-08-04.
  7. ^ a b "Substation Curaçao: Champman". Archived from the original on 2014-07-14. Retrieved 2014-06-07.
  8. ^ Substation Curaçao-Chapman Research Centre newsletter, Volume I, No. 1, December 2012
  9. ^ Tarantolo, Andrew, "The Curasub: Live the Life Aquatic Without Getting Wet," Gizmodo, 06/03/13 11:30 a.m.
  10. ^ Baldwin, CC (2013). "Deep Reef Observation Project (DROP): A Smithsonian - substation Curaçao collaboration". In: Lang, M.A., and M.D.J. Sayer, editors. 2013. Proceedings of the 2013 AAUS/ESDP Curaçao Joint International Scientific Diving Symposium, October 24–27, 2013, Curaçao. Dauphin Island, AL. American Academy of Underwater Sciences. Archived from the original on July 9, 2014. Retrieved 2014-07-06.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
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