Voyages

NIWA leads many ocean research voyages from the tropical waters of the Pacific to Antarctica, on our world-class environmental monitoring and research vessels.

  • DART buoy

    2017 - NOAA tsunami warning station

    A tsunami reporting station situated in the Pacific Ocean that is currently off line is to be upgraded in a joint operation involving New Zealand and United States government agencies.
  • Juvenile sea urchins sampled from part of Kaikōura Canyon.

    2017 - Kaikōura coastal zone

    NIWA vessel RV Tangaroa visted Kaikōura in September 2017 to investigate the impacts of the earthquake in the coastal zone, which includes effects on rocky reef habitats and communities, pāua fishery and Hector’s dolphins.
  • 2017_Canterbury_plains_groundwater

    2017 - Canterbury plains groundwater

    Voyage
    RV Tangaroa Voyage TAN1703
    5 April – 1 May 2017
  • 2017 - Chatham Rise biodiversity

    2017 - Chatham Rise biodiversity

    Voyage
    Quantifying Benthic Biodiversity: a factual voyage report from RV Tangaroa voyage TAN1701 to Chatham Rise
    4 January – 2 February 2017
  • Tangaroa TAN1613 Voyage

    2016 - Hikurangi subduction and slips

    Voyage
    Tangaroa TAN1613 Voyage Report
  • 2016 - Colville Ridge Geophysics voyage

    Voyage
    The main output of this voyage is providing data and fundamental base maps for future regional prospectivity surveys, tectonic plate reconstructions, and general understanding of the architecture of the Kermadec backarc.
  • 2016_Otago_multibeam

    2016 - Otago multibeam

    Voyage
    Otago Multibeam 2: Great South Basin and Southern Canterbury Shelf.
  • Bluefish

    2016 - Kermadecs biodiversity

    The voyage to the Kermadec region is a collaborative expedition between NIWA, Auckland Museum, Kelly Tarlton’s, Department of Conservation, Auckland and Massey Universities, The PEW Charitable Trusts and Te Papa.
  • A mother humpback whale and her calf surface for air.

    2015 - Antarctic Ecosystems

    The six-week New Zealand-Antarctic Ecosystem Voyage saw RV Tangaroa travel through the Southern Ocean to the Ross Sea to conduct a range of scientific fieldwork. The voyage was a collaboration between Antarctica New Zealand, NIWA and the Australian Antarctic Division.