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USNS Robert D. Conrad (T AGOR 3)

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Laid down
  
19 January 1961

Construction started
  
19 January 1961

Length
  
64 m

Tons burthen
  
1.243 million kg

Sponsored by
  
Mrs. Edmund B. Taylor

Launched
  
26 May 1962

Tonnage
  
1.089 million kg

Builder
  
Jacksonville

USNS Robert D. Conrad (T-AGOR-3) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Name
  
USNS Robert Dexter Conrad

Namesake
  
Robert Dexter Conrad, graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, born on 20 March 1905 in Orange, Massachusetts

Acquired
  
by the U.S. Navy, 29 November 1962

In service
  
circa 1962, as USNS Robert D. Conrad (T-AGOR-3)

USNS Robert D. Conrad (T-AGOR-3) was a Robert D. Conrad-class oceanographic research ship that served the U.S. Navy from 1962 to 1989. During that period – while operated by Columbia University—she provided valuable ocean-bottom information and underwater test data to the U.S. Navy and other U.S. agencies.

Contents

Constructed at Jacksonville, Florida

Robert D. Conrad (AGOR-3) was laid down in January 1961 by Gibbs Shipyards, Inc., Jacksonville, Florida; launched on 26 May 1962; sponsored by Mrs. Edmund B. Taylor; and completed and delivered to the Navy in November 1962.

Assigned to Columbia University

After delivery, the single screw, diesel-electric, oceanographic research ship, Robert D. Conrad, was assigned to the Lamont Geological Observatory, Columbia University, for operation.

Complete with wet and dry laboratories, scientific and chart room, photo laboratory, scientific drafting room, a machine shop, two 24" diameter tubes along the centerline for lowering instruments, and a retractable propeller in the bow to maintain position while working with equipment over the side, Robert D. Conrad worked for the Observatory (renamed the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in 1993) for her entire career.

Searching for the Thresher

Much of her work has been in cooperation with the Office of Naval Research and, during the spring and summer of 1963, Submarine Development Group 2 as that group searched the ocean floor for traces of the submarine Thresher.

The ship collected gravity and magnetics data on the seafloor; created seismic images of rock layers below the ocean floor; dredged rock samples; took ocean-floor sediment cores (creating what is now a collection of over 13,000 cores); mapped the ocean floor with sonar; and collected water samples to explore ocean currents, temperature, salinity, marine life and other data for a wide range of oceanographic research.

Inactivation

Robert D. Conrad went out of service and was struck from the Navy List on 4 October 1989. The old research ship was disposed of through scrapping 27 April 2004.

References

USNS Robert D. Conrad (T-AGOR-3) Wikipedia


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