URI Graduate School of Oceanography

URI Graduate School of Oceanography Studying the ocean and marine environments for 60+ years. GSO also carries on a tradition of active public service and outreach programming.

For six decades, studies of the ocean and marine environments have been a central focus of research and teaching at the University of Rhode Island Graduate School of Oceanography (GSO). Located on the water’s edge at the University’s Narragansett Bay Campus, GSO is an internationally respected oceanographic institution with a longstanding seagoing tradition. Founded in 1936 as the URI Narragansett

Marine Laboratory, and reorganized as the Graduate School of Oceanography in 1961, GSO is the state’s center for marine studies and cutting-edge research and outreach. GSO was founded as an institution without rigid boundaries between oceanographic sub-disciplines of biological, chemical, geological, and physical oceanography as well as archaeological oceanography and atmospheric chemistry. The result is a collegial school—an ideal setting for students, faculty, and staff to collaboratively address the science questions and challenges of today. GSO played a major role in creating the National Sea Grant Program and pioneered the integration of research, policy development, and stakeholder involvement in coastal management programs for implementation at local, state, national, and international scales. Complementing its broad-based research agenda, GSO has a strong academic program with nearly 1,000 conferred graduate degrees that are distributed equally between the master’s and doctoral levels. Graduates are employed in academia, government and non-governmental organizations, and the private sector and are distributed internationally across six continents and nearly three dozen countries. GSO benefits from strong, long-term support from the state, the University of Rhode Island, and diverse external funders. With an excellent seagoing capability and an attractive and practical waterfront campus as the home base for its Research Vessel Endeavor, GSO has close links among its research, academic, and public service and outreach programs.

Thinking about a swim at South Ferry Beach? 🏖️🏊‍♀️ The 2026 monitoring season for URI Watershed Watch is underway, and f...
06/01/2026

Thinking about a swim at South Ferry Beach? 🏖️🏊‍♀️ The 2026 monitoring season for URI Watershed Watch is underway, and for the seventh year, the Bay Campus community is helping track water quality at the beach on South Ferry Rd.

The first sampling of the season took place on May 20, with warm, sunny conditions. Results showed very low bacteria levels, with both enterococci and f***l coliform were below detectable limits (

As part of an ongoing National Park Service project focused on marsh migration,   professors J.P. Walsh and Erin Peck, a...
05/29/2026

As part of an ongoing National Park Service project focused on marsh migration, professors J.P. Walsh and Erin Peck, along with M.S. student Mitchell Starr, conducted fieldwork at the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad National Historical Park in Maryland to establish monitoring sites, deploy loggers and cameras, and measure elevations using RTK GPS and laser scanning technology.

The work supports efforts to better understand environmental change and guide future management decisions across the park and the nearby Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge — areas that are both ecologically significant and deeply important to American history.



📸 Photos courtesy of J.P. Walsh

🐌 For four weeks,   researchers were aboard the R/V Thomas G. Thompson studying deep-sea hydrothermal vent ecosystems in...
05/28/2026

🐌 For four weeks, researchers were aboard the R/V Thomas G. Thompson studying deep-sea hydrothermal vent ecosystems in the Lau Basin near Tonga as part of the Survey.

Led by Associate Professor Roxanne Beinart’s lab, the expedition examined the chemosynthetic symbionts of hydrothermal vent species. Using ROV Jason and AUV Sentry, the team worked to understand how hydrothermal vent ecosystems have fared following ash impacts from the 2022 Hunga eruption and how these communities recover after major disturbances.

The project included collaborators Shawn Arellano of Western Washington University, Jill McDermott of Lehigh University, and URI's Andy Davies, as well as participants from several other institutions. Members of the cruise highlighted in this set included ’s Michelle Beck, Vanessa Jimenez, Katie Stone, and Lexie DelViscio; URI undergraduate Paige Hojdar; and URI ocean engineer Johann Becker.

A huge thank you to the crews of WHOI’s ROV Jason and ROV Sentry, the crew of the R/V Thomas G. Thompson, the NSF for funding this work, and the Kingdom of Tonga for making this research possible.

🎉   student Alyssa Tsukada was recently named a 2025 Asian Cultural Ambassador Award winner at URI’s fourth annual Asian...
05/27/2026

🎉 student Alyssa Tsukada was recently named a 2025 Asian Cultural Ambassador Award winner at URI’s fourth annual Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month luncheon.

A first-year Ph.D. student in biological oceanography, Alyssa shares her culture with the URI community through food, art, and hands-on workshops that introduce students to Japanese crafting techniques. She has also showcased her work at the Winter Artisans’ Market.

Alyssa said these events help spark meaningful conversations about Asian American identity and cultural connection. You can see her work in her current Studio Blue exhibit, The Little Things: Exploring Nature's Mirrored Microscopic Morphologies, now open at the Bay Campus.

➡️ Congratulations, Alyssa! Read more: https://web.uri.edu/gso/news/uri-honors-2026-asian-cultural-ambassadors/

From the surface ocean to nearly 1,000 meters below, University of Rhode Island researchers are helping document life on...
05/26/2026

From the surface ocean to nearly 1,000 meters below, University of Rhode Island researchers are helping document life on Indonesia’s largely unexplored tropical seamounts 🌊

These underwater mountains can host rich deep-sea ecosystems, but scientists still know very little about the biodiversity they support in tropical regions like Indonesia.

URI College of the Environment and Life Sciences researcher Drajad Seto joined a recent OceanX-BRIN expedition, collecting plankton samples, processing deep-sea specimens, and helping map how biological communities change across seamount habitats and depths. Seto also completed a submersible dive to approximately 950 meters aboard OceanX’s Triton 3300/3 submersible, Neptune.

The collaborative project brings together researchers from URI and Indonesian institutions, including Associate Professor Roxanne Beinart, URI professor and Vice President for Research and Economic Development Bethany Jenkins, and University Gadjah Mada faculty member Noer Kasanah.

Together, the team is generating some of the first baseline biodiversity data from these ecosystems, foundational science that can help support future conservation and sustainable management of deep-sea environments: https://buff.ly/1NehCKn

📸 Photos courtesy of OceanX and Drajad Seto

Three generations of   plankton trawl assistants were out on the water together this week during the Narragansett Bay Lo...
05/21/2026

Three generations of plankton trawl assistants were out on the water together this week during the Narragansett Bay Long-Term Plankton Time Series’ regular weekly collection. 🌊

Each year, a student serves as the assistant for the survey, one of the world’s longest-running plankton time series. Since 1957, weekly samples have been collected to monitor phytoplankton communities and changing conditions in the Bay.

Current assistant Alyssa Tsukada was joined by John Selby and Bryan Plankenhorn, assistants from the two years prior, who came aboard to lend extra hands for additional sample collection during the trip aboard the Cap’n Bert. Pictured on the far left is Captain Steve, who has supported the weekly collections since 2017.

➡️ Explore the Plankton Time Series at : https://buff.ly/WphjnRN

Two new University of Rhode Island studies will help decode more than a century of coastal change on Block Island, deliv...
05/19/2026

Two new University of Rhode Island studies will help decode more than a century of coastal change on Block Island, delivering scientific guidance and planning tools directly to the community through more than $800,000 in combined Rhode Island Sea Grant funding and matching support.

One project, led by geologists Nathan Vinhateiro of URI and Bryan Oakley of ECSU, will investigate long-term changes to Block Island’s bluffs and shoreline. A second project, led by Assistant Professor Erin Peck and Ph.D. student Izzy Rico, will examine how the island’s salt marshes are responding to stressors such as sea-level rise and human land-use pressures.

The work expands the URI Coastal Institute’s Block Island Climate Response Demonstration Site, a growing collaboration connecting researchers, regional partners, local nonprofits, and community members to better monitor coastal change and support resilience planning. Researchers are working directly with the Town of New Shoreham, RI’s Coastal Resilience Committee to help ensure the science informs local decision-making.

➡️ Read more about how URI scientists are helping Block Island build science-informed strategies for coastal resilience and future management decisions: https://buff.ly/bMEssRE

To our graduating oceanographers: congratulations on this incredible achievement. 🌊🎓As you take your next steps, know th...
05/18/2026

To our graduating oceanographers: congratulations on this incredible achievement. 🌊🎓

As you take your next steps, know that the work you do matters: for our ocean and coasts, our communities, and the future of our planet. Whether you're heading into research, policy, education, industry, or exploration, you are part of the next generation shaping the future of ocean science.

We can’t wait to see where the tides take you next. Congratulations, University of Rhode Island Class of 2026!

➡️ More on the new graduates: https://buff.ly/OJbfT1Z

🎉 🎓  Congratulations to all of the new   graduates! Today, degree recipients attended the Annual GSO Shirting Ceremony, ...
05/15/2026

🎉 🎓 Congratulations to all of the new graduates! Today, degree recipients attended the Annual GSO Shirting Ceremony, a time-honored tradition celebrating GSO’s new grads.

On Sunday, degrees and certificates will be conferred during the joint commencement ceremony for University of Rhode Island and College of the Environment and Life Sciences students.

➡️ Celebrate the class of 2026 & tune in to the graduation live stream: https://buff.ly/OJbfT1Z

📸 Jess Kaelblein/ISC

🦀 “Research should not only answer scientific questions, but it should also be useful to the people and communities most...
05/14/2026

🦀 “Research should not only answer scientific questions, but it should also be useful to the people and communities most affected by it." - Ph.D. student Emmanuel Oyewole

As climate change and shifting ocean conditions continue to impact the American lobster fishery, many fishermen are adapting by targeting other valuable species, including Jonah crab.

That transition is at the center of Ph.D. student Emmanuel Oyewole’s research. Working near the Revolution Wind and South Fork Wind sites, Oyewole is studying how offshore wind farm structures may influence the growth, habitat use, and productivity of Jonah crab populations.

Because Jonah crabs are closely connected to seafloor habitats and play an important role in the marine food web, they offer a valuable lens for understanding how offshore wind development could shape local biodiversity and fisheries.

While tissue-specific stable isotope analysis forms the scientific foundation of his work, some of Oyewole’s most meaningful insights have come directly from Rhode Island fishermen. He has joined crews out of Point Judith as they haul ventless traps from 10 offshore stations, using those conversations and experiences on the water to help guide and inform his research.

➡️ Read more: https://web.uri.edu/gso/uncategorized/marine-life-finds-new-home-at-base-of-wind-turbines/

This research is supported by The Nature Conservancy in Rhode Island. Data will also benefit the Commercial Fisheries Research Foundation, a nonprofit founded by local commercial fishermen.

Address

215 S Ferry Road
Narragansett, RI
02882

Opening Hours

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Wednesday 8am - 5pm
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Friday 8am - 5pm

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+14018746222

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