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Academic & Professional Books  Marine & Freshwater Biology  Marine Biology  Marine Habitat

How Are Marine Robots Shaping Our Future?

New
By: James Bellingham(Author), Claudia Geib(Co-Author)
234 pages, 8 b/w photos and b/w illustrations
How Are Marine Robots Shaping Our Future?
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  • How Are Marine Robots Shaping Our Future? ISBN: 9781421450346 Paperback Dec 2025 Delivery estimate unavailable
    £15.50
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Price: £15.50
About this book Contents Customer reviews Biography Related titles

About this book

What will robots discover as they gather life-supporting data and resources from the depths of Earth's oceans to the reaches of deep space?

Below the waves, the ocean remains a largely undiscovered realm, with only 25% of its features mapped in detail. What we know about its depths, we've learned with the help of deep-sea robots. The latest generation of their technologies play a critical role as we tap the ocean in new ways to sustain our food, energy, and resource needs. World-renowned robotics expert James Bellingham introduces readers to this compelling world of contemporary undersea exploration and the vital role autonomous robots play in corporate and governmental aquaculture management, climate data, energy source locations, shipwreck explorations, and much more.

Bellingham, an inventor who has led dozens of expeditions from the Arctic to the Antarctic, discusses how deep-sea research using autonomous underwater vehicles and drones can translate into future missions, including the exploration of oceans on other planets and their moons. These forbidding environments are difficult to access and are not easily conducive to life, making robots that can move, explore, and collect data – without the need for crews – critically important for research and the development of essential industries that support our survival.

Exploration robotics works on three frontiers simultaneously: scientific discovery, advanced technology, and extreme environments. Bellingham shares harrowing anecdotes from his work on all three, including weathering storms off the Antarctic Peninsula, breaking new ground in designing and deploying ocean robots that think and navigate for themselves, and seeing the ocean in a new light through the eyes of these technological proxies. Along the way, readers will develop a newfound appreciation for how robots are transforming exploration – and what these voyages mean for the future of humanity.

The more marine robotics extend our physical and intellectual capacities, the more they challenge us to redefine what it means to coexist with the world around us. The real revolution is just beginning, lying in how these machines will transform our understanding of our environments – allowing us to balance discovery with stewardship by supporting a thriving human society while safeguarding the ecosystems we depend on.

Contents

Preface
1. The Challenge of Searching the Seas
2. Opening the Door
3. Teamwork
4. The Living Ocean
5. The Ocean in Our Kitchens
6. Powered by the Ocean
7. Oceans Across the Solar System
8. Could Deep Sea Robots Discover Life in Deep Space?
Epilogue

Acknowledgments

Customer Reviews

Biography

James Bellingham, PhD, is the executive director of the Johns Hopkins Institute for Assured Autonomy and the Bloomberg Distinguished Professor of exploration robotics. For more than 30 years, Bellingham has served as a global leader in the development of small, high-performance autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs), introducing and refining a class of systems that are now widely used within the military, commercial industries, and science communities. He has been instrumental in innovations for ocean observation and has spent considerable time at sea, leading two dozen AUV expeditions in locations across the Antarctic, North Atlantic, Mediterranean, South Pacific, and Arctic. Bellingham previously led robotics teams at MIT, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, and the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute.

Claudia Geib is a science journalist, editor, and the producer of the podcast Gastropod. She is also the author of Secrets of the Elephants. Her reporting, focusing on marine, environmental, and wildlife science, can be found in Nautilus, The Guardian, and WIRED, among others, and has been featured in The Best American Science Writing.

New
By: James Bellingham(Author), Claudia Geib(Co-Author)
234 pages, 8 b/w photos and b/w illustrations
Media reviews

"Bellingham's book, which illuminates the desires, challenges, innovations, and rewards of exploration in extreme ocean conditions, stirs the same emotions and curiosity that led me toward venturing into space."
– Daniel Tani, NASA astronaut, space shuttles Endeavor and Discovery; NASA aquanaut, NEEMO 2; Director, Northrop Grumman Space Systems

"Bellingham and Geib present real-world events to frame the impacts of complex and elegant marine exploration systems here on Earth, and how they might one day search for life in the seas of our neighboring planets and moons."
– Rear Admiral Lorin Selby, United States Navy (Ret); former Chief of Naval Research

"[D]escribes in considerable detail the physical conditions of the ocean's terrain and the complex array of equipment used – yesterday and today – to explore it. An interesting and readable account of the history and potential of marine exploration technology – at last!"~
– Daniel L. Pawson, Senior Scientist Emeritus and former Director, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution

"As a global leader in the design and utilization of autonomous underwater systems, Bellingham offers an insightful and compelling set of case studies which define not only the trajectory of the science, but a sense of how valuable robotics technologies will be in addressing society's most critical problems."
– Richard Spinrad, former Chief Scientist and Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere, NOAA

"[P]ulls back the curtain on the hidden oceanic expanse and demonstrates why it's so vital to our future."
– George Nolfi, screenwriter, The Bourne Ultimatum and Ocean's Twelve; writer-director, The Adjustment Bureau and The Banker

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