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May
18, 2005
New Partnership Forged to Build
Next-Generation Site Survey Data Bank
California Institution Wins 10-Year
Contract From International Research Program
By Ashley Wood
The Integrated
Ocean Drilling Program Management International is moving ahead
with plans to turn the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program Site
Survey Data Bank into a fully electronic, Web-based, science
information resource. Earlier this year, IODP-MI released a
request for proposals to find a contractual partner that would
receive, catalog, and store data required to support its ocean
drilling proposal submission and review processes, as well as
to support safe, efficient scientific drilling operations at
sea. A team from Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD,
and the San Diego Supercomputer Center was awarded the SSDB
management contract. Effective May 4, 2005, the contract will
continue for six to nine years, and is worth up to $3.8 million.
The IODP Site Survey
Data Bank contains seismic, geological mapping, borehole drilling,
and logging data that support the review of current scientific
proposals and the writing of future proposals. IODP President
& CEO Manik Talwani noted that, “Though it has grown
with increasing volumes of electronic and digital data, the
current SSDB still contains significant amounts of hard copy.
The future SSDB will be transformed into a more interactive,
more powerful support tool for research scientists involved
in ocean drilling.” IODP’s proposal submission process
also is moving to an entirely electronic, Web-based process.
“We are pleased
to receive management responsibilities for the SSDB,”
said Scripps Director Charles Kennel. Underscoring the fact
that Scripps has operated a fleet of research vessels for a
century, he added, “We understand the underlying scientific
goals of the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program and appreciate
this opportunity for community-oriented collaborative effort.
This project opens the door to many new opportunities.”
“Scripps submitted
an outstanding proposal that drew upon cutting-edge information
technology expertise,” said Hans Christian Larsen, IODP-MI
Vice President of Science Planning. “We expect this new
initiative to have positive, qualitative impact on future scientific
drilling proposals: it will support IODP-MI proposal reviews
and operations at sea with the necessary data.” The SSDB
moves into a fully digital era with approximately 150 pending
proposals.
The UCSD team has rendered
data, documents, and images from nearly 700 Scripps discovery
expeditions into Web-accessible information, according to Stephen
Miller, head of the Geological Data Center at Scripps. “We
have drawn upon the collaboration of Scripps’ researchers,
computer scientists at the San Diego Supercomputer Center, and
archivists and librarians at the UCSD libraries,” Miller
said, “and will now apply that combined expertise to the
next-generation IODP Site Survey Data Bank.”
“SDSC is recognized
for state-of-the-art data management technologies from the supercomputing
world,” said John Helly, senior staff scientist at SDSC.
“We’re looking forward to extending our succussful
history of collaboration with Scripps scientists in applying
these technologies to building cyberinfrastructure for the demanding
real-world needs of the ocean sciences.”
Scripps sustained a
rigorous bid process to win the IODP contract. IODP-MI staff
drafted SSDB technical and cost specifications last fall, detailing
required deliverables, the scope of work, administrative requirements,
proposal evaluation criteria, and the project’s mission
description. The bid opportunity was published in a broadly
circulated weekly newspaper for Earth scientists and also was
posted online by many scientific institutions. Prior to the
proposal deadline, prospective bidders submitted questions to
IODP-MI to clarify the project’s parameters. Vendors on
two continents submitted SSDB management proposals. An evaluation
panel technically reviewed all proposals received before a final
recommendation was unanimously made.
Now in its second century
of discovery, Scripps Oceanography is one of the oldest, largest,
and most important centers for global ocean and earth science
research and graduate training in the world. Its scientific
scope includes Earth system studies: biological, physical, chemical,
geological, geophysical, and atmospheric. The institution has
a staff of about 1,300 and annual expenditures of approximately
$140 million from federal, state, and private sources.
The Integrated Ocean
Drilling Program is an international marine research drilling
program dedicated to advancing scientific understanding of the
Earth by monitoring and sampling sub seafloor environments.
Using multiple drilling platforms, IODP scientists explore the
program’s principal themes: the deep biosphere, environmental
change, and solid earth cycles. The program’s initial
10-year, $1.5 billion science plan is supported by two lead
agencies, the U.S. National Science Foundation and Japan’s
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology.
Other partners include the European Consortium of Ocean Drilling
Research, and the People’s Republic of China, Ministry
of Science and Technology.
In 2005 the San Diego
Supercomputer Center celebrates two decades of enabling international
science and engineering discoveries through advances in computational
science and high performance computing. Continuing this legacy
into the era of cyberinfrastructure, SDSC is a strategic resource
to science, industry, and academia, offering leadership in data
management, grid computing, bioinformatics, geoinformatics,
high-performance computing, and other science and engineering
disciplines. SDSC is an organized research unit of UCSD with
a staff of more than 400 scientists, software developers, and
support personnel, primarily funded by the National Science
Foundation.
Media Contacts:
Nancy Light, IODP-MI, Director
of Communications 202-465-7511
Mario Aguilera or Cindy
Clark, Scripps Institution of Oceanography
858-534-3624
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