Canada’s National Facility for Seismological Investigations (NFSI) was set up in 2021 to investigate, characterise and predict this risk, in Canada and overseas.
Based at Dalhousie University and supported by a partnership of 10 Canadian universities, NFSI was funded through a major Canadian Foundation for Innovation investment with approximately C$15 million allocated for equipment and infrastructure.
Core to this is a national pool of more than 120 broadband ocean-bottom seismometers (OBS). Since operations launched in 2023, around 100 of these have been deployed annually in locations ranging from the Arctic to New Zealand.
By placing seismometers directly on the seafloor, researchers can detect much smaller offshore earthquakes and determine their locations far more accurately than is possible using land-based sensors alone.
But positioning them and, crucially, recovering them to download their data, then getting them ready for the next deployment, isn’t simple, especially when locations range from ice-covered Arctic waters to 4,700 m deep abyssal plain.
And because the NSFI team relies on diverse “vessels of opportunity”, from small fishing boats to ice-rated trawlers and large coastguard ships, and operates with a very small field staff, their choice of underwater positioning also has to be flexible.







