User talk:UPPUVELLAM

The Geological Survey of India, Marine Geological Surveys-- PIT FALLS
The Geological Survey of India is ready to receive a scientific ship at a colossal expenditure with a promise of Quality Marine Geological work to the Nation. Geological Survey of India has also recruited earth scientists in their hundreds for the same in the last few years. It is also important to note that those who have planned in acquiring the new ship are poised to retire before it becomes a reality. So it is pertinent to put on record the history of Marine Wing Geological Survey of India. Marine wing actually worked under the petrology division Geological Survey of India, Kolkata in the seventies, and luminaries like Dr H.N.Siddiqui who later shifted to National Institute of Oceanography and began 'Polymetallic Nodule Investigation', in the south Indian Ocean. http://www.amu.ac.in/showloa.jsp?did=4

Expansion of Marine Geological Surveys
It took more than a decade for GSI to acquire a ship of it's own in the early nineteen eighties, and expand offices to Cochin, Mangalore and Visakhapatnam.

New entrants of Marine wing may learn from a history of the past three decades (1980,1990,2000) and hopefully do some purposeful research.

Here is an account of Marine Wing of Geological Survey of India and it's ships after 1982:

R.V Samudramanthan
This ship was acquired in the year 1983, by modifying and refitting Vshwa Vinai a cargo ship, at a shipyard in the United Kingdom.

Instruments and equipment
The ship was fitted with the following instruments which were unfit for the work, or never used due to various reasons. Here is a list of failed instruments.

Shallow Seismic Survey equipment
The equipment which was popularly known as 'Huntec', was misfit for the ship and the record of Shallow seismic survey was of little use.

Side Scan Sonar
This was also hardly used and effective, as the ship cannot reach depths shallower and meant for this equipment for effective survey.

'''Vibro Corer
 This equipemt which was on board was never (even once), used. A Director Mechanical Engineer took up a cruise (Samudramanthan-17) and made a great effort (at serious personal risk of injury) to make this equipment useful but failed. This just rusted and became junk, right on-board the ship.

Position Fixing equipment
Magnavox nsvigation system with a computer for processing signals of Deca Hi-Fix, with auto pilot was fitted on board.

Neither Deca Hi-Fix interface nor Auto pilot were ever used or usable. Only the Magnavox Sat-nav was useful.

Boomerang Grabs
These are equipment for sampling for polymetalic nodules, in the (South) Indian Ocean. The ship with only '25' days endurance hardly can work there as the time taken to reach location leaves very little time to work. Inspite of this common knowledge, they were procured for no use. Just to avoid audit objections a scientific cruise (Samudramanthan -8-)was mounted, to test this equipment.

For more than a decade the only equipment Scientific cruises Operated with, just the Magnavox position fixing equipment and an Echo-sounder for measuring depths, other than grab sampler and a meter long corer, which is an apology for serious marine geological work.

Fitting new equipment to G.S.I's Samudramanthan
Inspite of the fact that this ship is very old and has frequent repairs, they have fitted a 'Hull mounted Scanner (hydro-sweep)', which is also not used to a great extent because of this is now a old ship.

Samudra Kausthubh and Samudra Saudhikama
These two coastal launches with wonderful equipment were presented by Holland. These ships (coastal launches), were meant for a -24- hour work, but Geological Survey of India, has it's silly reasons (inefficient administration) to use these ships only during day time.

Piston corer
This equipment was used very rarely, which could have yielded long core sample to unravel the secrets of sediments and sedimentation.

Sidescan sonar
This equipment was very rarely used.

Trisponder positioning system
This equipment was used at best only on Samudra Kausthubh, in the east coast giving great accuracy of positioning. After an initial phase of time, Samudra Saudhikama stopped using this and used a less accurate Geographic Positioning System (GPS) with far less accuracy. This was mainly because the west coast of India is not easy for establishing shore operated support stations unlike the east coast of India.

September 2013
Hello, I'm A.amitkumar. An edit that you recently made to Geological Survey of India seemed to be a test and has been removed. If you want more practice editing, please use the sandbox. If you think I made a mistake, or if you have any questions, you can leave me a message on my talk page. Thanks!  A m i t  웃  15:15, 3 September 2013 (UTC)

Please refrain from making nonconstructive edits to Wikipedia, as you did at Geological Survey of India with this edit. Your edits appear to constitute vandalism and have been reverted or removed. If you would like to experiment, please use the sandbox. Thank you.  A m i t  웃  15:22, 3 September 2013 (UTC)