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Website Navigation
Updated
June 23, 2006
Introduction
U-Boat War in the Gulf
Shipwrecks
Alcoa Puritan
Anona
Halo
Additional
Pictures
Gulfpenn
Additional Pictures
Robert E. Lee
Additional Pictures
U-166
Additional Pictures
New! Bow Mosaic!
Virginia
U-Boats
U-166
U-506
U-507
Other Gulf U-Boats
Weapons and Technology
The German U-Boat
Survivors' Stories

Science in the Sea
Microbiology
Invertebrate Biology
Fish Habitat Science
Deep Sea Technologies
Mapping the Deep Sea
ROV Technology
Triton XL ROV
HOS Dominator
Team Members
R. Church (Project PI)
D. Warren (Co-PI)
D. Aig
A. Baldwin
D. Ball
A. Corbin
R. Cullimore
L. Dreamer
A. Hall
K. Haywood
P. Hitchcock
C. Horrell
J. Irion
L. Johnston
K. Kaczmarek
M. Kilgour
H. Leedy
J. Moore
N. Morris
G. Myers
M. Overfield
W. Patterson
W. Schroeder
T. Shirley
S. Smith
R. Tunkel
I. Zelo
Education for All

Supporting Affiliates
For Further Information
Contact Information
Useful Links
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Morgan
Kilgour, BS
Masters Student in Marine Biology
University of Alaska Fairbanks |
Morgan Kilgour is currently a graduate student of Dr. Tom Shirley at the
University of Alaska Fairbanks working towards an MS in Marine Biology.
She will be looking at how invertebrates vary by depth and substrate on
the shipwrecks. After graduating from the University of California,
Santa Cruz in June of 2003, Ms. Kilgour worked as a lab assistant to the
Salmon Population Analysis Team for the NOAA Fisheries lab in Santa
Cruz. During her career at NOAA she worked as a field technician as well
as researching historical reports of coho salmon in California. She also
volunteered at UCSC’s Marine Mammal Performance and Physiology Project
under Dr. Terrie Williams, and participated in Pete Raimondi and Giacomo
Bernardi’s marine field quarter in Moorea, French Polynesia.
Ms. Kilgour is originally from Sacramento,
California, and is now residing in Juneau, Alaska to do her graduate
work. |
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