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Last summer, a team of 91̽»¨ oceanographers successfully deep underwater for an off the Washington and Oregon coasts.

Now scientists from around the country are meeting to discuss how this will change how people monitor and study seafloor geology. The Networked Observations and Visualizations of the Axial Environment, or NOVAE, workshop, titled “s,” will take place April 20 through 22 at the Talaris Conference Center near the UW.

The says the meeting aims to review and update the driving scientific questions related to Axial volcano and similar systems; explore new technology that can be added to the seafloor network; create research paths for the next five, 10 and 20 years; and create a draft science plan for the larger community to review.

Conference organizer , a 91̽»¨professor of oceanography, will give the opening lecture with , a professor at the University of South Florida. The speaker Monday evening will be , the director of the ocean sciences division of the National Science Foundation.

, a 91̽»¨professor of oceanography, has been watching the seismic data since it began flowing last fall to a Seattle . In a blog post in early 2015, Wilcock noted the increasing number of tremors and asked if the volcano might be . Since then he has been posting on the seismic activity recorded at the 3,600-foot-tall volcano, located on the seafloor about 300 miles off of Cannon Beach, Oregon.

Researchers at Oregon State University and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration who what they think is an impending eruption will be at the workshop as well.

Other include 91̽»¨oceanographers Deborah Kelley, Giora Proskurowski, Mike Harrington, David Butterfield, Dana Manalang and Marvin Lilley.

Sponsors of the three-day meeting include the 91̽»¨College of the Environment, the 91̽»¨Applied Physics Laboratory, Ocean Networks Canada, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute.