And Sometimes You Luck Out

From Science Online...

lalala

In April 2006, Maya Tolstoy, a geophysicist at Columbia University, received some good news and some bad news during a research expedition at sea. The submarine volcano that she and her colleague Felix Waldhauser had been monitoring for years had recently erupted. This was exciting, because only a handful of other deep-sea eruptions have been detected (1), and it was the first time ocean-bottom seismometers were in place during such an event. However, two-thirds of the instruments were stuck in the new lava on the sea floor (see the figure). Would the remaining third yield the data needed to gain new insights into this fundamental but poorly understood geological process? In the end, the good news outweighed the bad. The instruments that were recovered provided some remarkable results, as Tolstoy et al. report on page 1920 of this issue (2). Also, this may only be the first installment in this story, because there is hope that more instruments can be rescued from the sea floor.

More like this

Go here and here for context, then discuss the idiosyncrasy of such lists.
The two most powerful warriors are patience and time. - Leo Nikolaevich Tolstoy
True science investigates and brings to human perception such truths and such knowledge as the people of a given time and society consider most important. Art transmits these truths from the region of perception. - Leo Nikolaevich Tolstoy
In saying that without the power of the state, evil men would rule over the good it is taken for granted that the good are precisely those who at the present time have power, and the bad the same who are now subjugated. - Leo Nikolaevich Tolstoy

We need to put together an urgent top priority mission to recover those imstruments - quick, call Bruce Willis!

By Mustafa Mond, FCD (not verified) on 21 Dec 2006 #permalink

Perhaps, but Bruce Willis blew up the comet in Armageddon. So he probably wouldn't be as delicate as would be required. We need Tommy Lee Jones from Volcano!