Innovation

Cheers Oceaneers - IEEE Oceanic Engineering Society (OES) Happy Hour

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DateWednesday, July 10, 2024 | 5:30 PM to 8:00 PM
LocationLeucadia Pizzeria & Italian Restaurant La Jolla / University City 7748 Regents Rd San Diego, CA 92122
IEEE OES, TMA BlueTech, and the Marine Technology Society is hosting their next happy hour on July 10th. 
 
Join in for networking and friendly conversation about everything oceanic, engineering, science, Blue Tech, and more, while enjoying pizza and drinks. This month, they have a special guest speaker, Kevin Hardy. See below for details.
 

Agenda:

5:30pm: Arrival.

6:00pm – 6:15pm: OES, TMA, and MTS announcements

6:15pm – 6:45pm: Sealab III presentation by Kevin Hardy

6:45pm – 7:00pm: “open mic” (but there isn’t a microphone) for any other attendees to present anything they like (ocean-related, of course).

Examples: employers presenting opportunities for employment, job seekers presenting a quick bio, internship program opportunities, promoting other events, seeking funding, “show and tell” of any cool technology you are working on, etc.

7:00pm – 8:00pm: Enjoy some pizza and drinks and chatting with fellow oceanic engineering enthusiasts.

 

Presentation: "SEALAB III: The Divers' Story"

In February 1969, on the lee side of San Clemente Island off Los Angeles, SEALAB III was lowered to the seafloor 610-ft below the surface.  It was the third in a series of USN Man-in-the-Sea projects.  Over a dozen years, USN Captain George Bond, and his second in command, Capt. Walter Mazzone, had labored to advance the science of saturation diving from theory to practice.  It was a giant leap forward in deep sea diving.  But with tragic implications, for SEALAB III, Bond and Mazzone were assigned advisory roles to a line officer, Capt. William Nicholson, who had little knowledge and less experience with saturation diving and large program management.  

It didn't go well.

In preparation for SEALAB III, 60 divers trained, 45 divers were assigned to five dive teams, four men rode the Personnel Transfer Capsule to the bottom twice, three emerged, two touched the habitat during two dives that lasted between 7 and 15 minutes, and one of them died.

In an epic miscarriage of justice, a single enlisted man was assigned full responsibility for the death by a USN Board of Inquiry.  Attention in the media shifted to the upcoming Apollo 11 Moon landing, and the unsettled matter subsided from public memory.

This is the story as told by the men below the keel.

Speaker:  Kevin Hardy

As a youth, Kevin was inspired by the USN's Project Nekton/bathyscaph Trieste, WWII diesel electric submarines, and SEALAB II, deployed in 1965 at 205-ft off the coast of Scripps Institution of Oceanography.  He worked a full career and retired from Scripps Institution in 2012.  He remains involved with the ocean community as a journalist for the Journal of Diving History and the Marine Technology Reporter, and as founder of Global Ocean Design, a San Diego company specializing in unmanned ocean landers.  He is a member of both IEEE-OES and MTS, and served as MTS-SD Chair twice.

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