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Rainier

NOAA Ship Rainier

Credit: NOAA

Specifications

Type of Ship: Hydrographic
Hull Number: S221
Length: 231.00 ft
Range: 5898 nautical miles
Endurance: 22 days
Speed: 12.00 knots
Additional Specs: SCSShore

Contact Info

Commanding Officer: CAPT Hector Casanova
Homeport:

Newport, OR
United States

Homeport Phone Number: 206-861-8747
Facebook: NOAA Ship Rainier
Ship's Email Address: noaa.ship.rainier@noaa.gov

About the ship

NOAA Ship Rainier was built by Aerojet-General Shipyards in Jacksonville, Florida. The ship was commissioned on October 2 1968, and is currently homeported in Newport, Oregon. Rainier is a hydrographic survey ship that maps the ocean to aid maritime commerce, improves coastal resilience, and studies the marine environment. The ship primarily operates in Alaska and Pacific Northwest.

Rainier ’s officers, technicians, and scientists log the data that NOAA cartographers use to create and update the nation’s nautical charts with ever-increasing data richness and precision.

In addition to supporting marine navigation, data acquired by hydrographic survey ships support marine ecosystem studies and fisheries habitat mapping. Scientists also use Rainier ’s data to study the geologic processes that are changing the shape of the seafloor and improve inundation models for areas vulnerable to tsunamis.

The ship’s side scan sonar collects imagery of the sea floor, which can identify obstructions or wrecks that could be navigational hazards and identify characteristics of interest to biologists and geologists. The sonar emits sound waves in a swath, which generates a detailed image of objects on the seafloor.

To obtain accurate depth measurements (within 10 centimeters), the ship uses multibeam echo sounders. The bathymetric data can be converted into three-dimensional models to provide extremely accurate depths and detailed images of the sea floor and objects.

The 231-ft. Rainier currently has five aluminum launches that use shallow-water multibeam echo sounders for surveying. The launches also conduct diving projects and shore support operations such as installation and removal of tide gauges. The ship and launches are equipped with data acquisition and processing computers, differential global positioning systems, positioning and altitude systems, and an assortment of bottom samplers, tide gauges, land survey equipment, and sound velocimeters.

Rainier is named after Mount Rainier, which is an active volcano ascending to 14,410 feet above sea level. Mount Rainier stands as an icon in the Washington landscape. It is the most glaciated peak in the contiguous U.S., spawning six major rivers. A sister ship to NOAA Ship Fairweather, Rainier is homeported at the NOAA Marine Operations Center-Pacific in Newport, Oregon, and primarily operates in Alaska and the Pacific Northwest.