Southampton Marine Sciences Center
Take a virtual tour of the marine station at Southampton!
Stony Brook University’s School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences (SoMAS) is on the forefront of marine research on the east end of Long Island with its 15,000-square foot, two-story Marine Sciences Center located on its Southampton campus. Already home to cutting edge and internationally recognized research on harmful algal blooms, ocean acidification, seagrasses, shellfish, and ocean acoustics, this facility has greatly expanded the research capabilities of SoMAS in Southampton. These expanded abilities ultimately benefit Long Island and its coastal ecosystems as a majority of the research in Southampton focuses on our local bays, harbors, and estuaries.
The central feature of the new facility is a computerized, state-of the-art 2,500-square-foot indoor seawater lab, which is capable of supplying three different seawater scenarios; ambient, temperature control and a closed recirculation system. The ambient seawater line allows researchers to mimic the seasonal temperature changes of Shinnecock Bay by pulling water directly from the bay to supply various research tanks. With temperatures fluctuating between approximately 1°C during the winter and 26°C in the summer, a temperature control line is able to instantly heat or chill incoming water to any temperature desired by a researcher. For research requiring very specific water quality parameters, the closed recirculation system allows for greater control of not only temperature, but salinity and various other aspects of the water chemistry.
In addition to this impressive indoor wet lab, the Marine Sciences Center has an additional 2,400 sq. ft. of outdoor wet lab space that can accommodate larger experimental chambers or those experiments that would benefit from a natural sunlight cycle.
Research and education go hand in hand at the Marine Sciences Center. A classroom, analytical lab, and a prep lab that supports two teaching laboratories not only enhance one of the nation’s top ranked marine science graduate programs, but strengthens the increased growth of Stony Brook Southampton’s undergraduate Semester by the Sea program. A large entrance lobby, hallway with a view of the wet lab and conference room allow Stony Brook Southampton to bring awareness of our marine environment to the local community through lectures, tours, and trips aboard our research vessels.
To keep with Stony Brook Southampton’s environmental mission, the Marine Sciences Center was constructed with many “green” features. Sustainable design innovations such as energy recovery of ventilation air, day lighting of all normally occupied spaces, a low static pressure ductwork system, high-efficiency lighting and a super-insulated exterior wall assembly all work together to bring a silver LEED rating to the Marine Sciences Center.
The Marine Sciences Center is also home to a fleet of research vessels including the R/V Paumanok, a 44-foot ocean-going vessel used for coastal research, the R/V Shinnecock, a 35-foot platform craft used for sampling local bays and estuaries, the R/V Parker, a 25-foot craft that can operate year-round and in shallow waters, and the R/V Peconic, a 45-foot catamaran, houseboat-style vessel for operation in protected bays and rivers. Many small, outboard crafts equipped with winches, davits and metering wheels for sampling instruments such as oxygen analyzers, CTD-probes, and trawls.
Take a tour of the new Marine Science Center by visiting our galleries page.
For questions related to the Southampton Marine Sciences Center, please contact
Prospective Stony Brook students: To be added to the invitation list for future tours at the Southampton campus, please complete this form on the SBU Admissions website. Your information will be added to our email list where you will receive updates about SoMAS majors, the application process, and main campus and Southampton campus tour options.
News articles related to the Marine Station and Marine Sciences Center are listed below:
Marine Science Lecture Probes Local Waterways
SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y., April 17, 2009 – The School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences and Stony Brook Southampton will present interesting local environmental findings in its “Critical Issues Facing the World's Oceans” lecture series. The popular series regularly attracts...
Marine Science Lecture Series Continues at Stony Brook Southampton
SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y., March 19, 2009 – The School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences and Stony Brook Southampton will present an interesting talk on Antarctic ecosystem in its “Critical Issues Facing the World's Oceans” lecture series. The popular series regularly...
Scenes From Friday, Dec. 5: Low-Carbon Symposium, Windmill Lighting, Marine-Science Talk and Video Game Tourney
It was a busy Friday, Dec. 5, at Stony Brook Southampton. The day started with a symposium: "Low-Carbon: Catalyzing the Green Transformation," in the Avram Theater. Sponsored by the new International Consortium for a Low-Carbon Society, the symposium included Stony...
New Institute for Ocean Conservation Science at SBU to Tackle Pressing Threats to Marine Ecosystem
Above: David Conover, Assemblyman Fred W. Thiele, Jr., Shirley Strum Kenny, Ellen Pikitch, Eric Kaler Newswise — Today Stony Brook University announced the establishment of the Institute for Ocean Conservation Science within its School of Marine and Atmospheric...
NBC Nightly News Features SoMAS Programs at Southampton
SoMAS faculty and students appeared in a television feature which aired last night on the nationally broadcast NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams. The report on “green majors” for undergraduate students interested in environmental issues featured Stony Brook...
Stony Brook Southampton to Host Transfer Day; Adds Two New Majors
SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y., January 14, 2008 – Prospective students will have two more majors to choose from at Stony Brook Southampton’s Transfer Day. On Wednesday, January 23, from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. in Chancellors Hall, Stony Brook Southampton admissions staff will be on...
Stony Brook President Shirley Strum Kenny Details Plans to Make Southampton a Revolutionary, Green Campus
Above: Stony Brook University President Shirley Strum Kenny signs the Talloires Declaration on Friday at Stony Brook Southampton. PHOTO CREDIT: Marylou Stewart, Media Services, Stony Brook University At the Town Hall meeting, Dr. Kenny noted Stony Brook’s growth plan,...
These Special Horses Don’t Require Saddles (The Southampton Press)
By Dawn Watson If it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck, theoretically it should be a duck. But what if it looks like a tiny alligator that mated with a horse, and resembles a fish dancing on a pogo stick? Then it is the Hippocampus genus of fish belonging to...
Stony Brook University Completes Purchase of Former Southampton College Property
Interdisciplinary Programs to Focus on Environment and its Sustainability Stony Brook University today completed its purchase of the former Southampton College for $35 million, taking possession of the 82-acre property, where it plans to develop academic programs...
Stony Brook Southampton Plans Symposium Focusing On Key Issues Of Sustainability
Farmers, Fishermen, Chefs, Designers, Educators and Preservationists Think Green on Sept. 16-17 STONY BROOK, N.Y., August 31, 2006 Stony Brook University?s Center for Wine, Food, and Culture will host a weekend symposium, ?Sustaining The Good Life,? on September 16...