Oceans 2003. Celebrating the Past ... Teaming Toward the Future (IEEE Cat. No.03CH37492) 2003
DOI: 10.1109/oceans.2003.178184
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Countermine operations in very shallow water and surf zone: the role of bottom crawlers

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Cited by 9 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Both are used routinely in water and land-based searches (examples include the SeaQuest Gradiometer and the SeaSpy Magnetometer), yet like GPR (below) very little has been published in the scientific literature on their use in water-based forensic searches, with the exception of UXO detection (see Nelson & McDonald, 2001, Pope et al, 1996, Lenham et al 2006. Zafrir et al, (2001) describe the use of mapping magnetic anomalies from a vessel in unexploded ordnance detection, whilst Aponick & Bernstein (2003) show how terrestrial line searches may be made in a 'crawler' style (a 'fingertip search' is the term more commonly used in police operations) in the intertidal zone for searches of weapons.…”
Section: Magnetometers and Underwater Metal Detectorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Both are used routinely in water and land-based searches (examples include the SeaQuest Gradiometer and the SeaSpy Magnetometer), yet like GPR (below) very little has been published in the scientific literature on their use in water-based forensic searches, with the exception of UXO detection (see Nelson & McDonald, 2001, Pope et al, 1996, Lenham et al 2006. Zafrir et al, (2001) describe the use of mapping magnetic anomalies from a vessel in unexploded ordnance detection, whilst Aponick & Bernstein (2003) show how terrestrial line searches may be made in a 'crawler' style (a 'fingertip search' is the term more commonly used in police operations) in the intertidal zone for searches of weapons.…”
Section: Magnetometers and Underwater Metal Detectorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[23] Some robots are inspired from natural creatures, such as robot turtle by Low et al [24], crab-like robot by Wang et al [25], lobster by Ayers et al [26], and snake-like robot AmphiBot I and II by Crespi et al [27,28]. We also have developed an amphibious snake-like robot.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rescue robots have been developed extensively in response to the damage caused by earthquakes and tsunamis. Mobile robots consisting of wheels [1] and tracks [2], the robotic turtle [3], the crab-like robot [4], robotic lobster [5] and snake-like robots [6] [7], were developed to perform search and rescue tasks, but few can be practically used in harsh amphibious environments. Therefore, new forms of robots must be developed to work in various adverse environments, such as waterlogged, sandy, muddy, or rocky land.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%