Berita Sedimentologi
Vol 33, No 1 (2015)

Indonesian Marine Geology Research Vessels: Their Capacity and Activity

Ai Yuningsih (Marine Geological Institute (P3GL), Bandung, Indonesia)
Wahyu Pandoe (Agency for the Assessment and Application of Technology, Indonesia (BPPT))
Herman Darman (Shell International EP, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia)



Article Info

Publish Date
07 Aug 2021

Abstract

About two thirds of Indonesian territory is covered by sea, below which there is little-documented and fascinating geological features which require study. Observing and understanding this geology is obviously technically more difficult than for the onshore. Thus, knowledge of the submarine geology relies on research and commercial ships.The marine geology of Indonesia has been studied since the 18th century. Two French ships called Boudeuse and Etoile, and led by De Bougainville sailed to collect data in 1768. Since then many other research vessels came and were run by researchers from the UK, Austria, the Netherlands, USA, Germany and Japan. In late 1980s Indonesia bought its own research vessel, Baruna Jaya 1, and since then has built its own fleet of research vessels.

Copyrights © 2015






Journal Info

Abbrev

FOSI

Publisher

Subject

Earth & Planetary Sciences

Description

BERITA SEDIMENTOLOGI aims to disseminate knowledge on the field of sedimentary geology to its readers. The journal welcomes contributions in the form of original research articles, review articles, short communications and discussions and replies. Occasionally, Berita Sedimentologi also includes ...