Royal Naval School of Meteorology and Oceanography explained

Royal Naval School of Meteorology and Oceanography
Native Name:RNSMO
Former Names:Royal Naval School of Meteorology
Map Type:United Kingdom Cornwall
Altitude:800NaN0
Building Type:Training centre
Address:Cornwall, TR12 7RH
Client:Fleet Air Arm
Owner:Royal Navy
Coordinates:50.088°N -5.249°W
Completion Date:1959
Inauguration Date:1959

The Royal Naval School of Meteorology and Oceanography was a Royal Navy military meteorology training establishment in Cornwall; the site closed, and the school moved to Devon in 2003.

History

The meteorological training site began at Dale, Pembrokeshire, moving to Cornwall in 1959 for sailors, with officers arriving in 1960 at the RN School of Meteorology.

Also at the site in Wales was the RN Air Direction Centre, which trained officers and sailors in radar navigation; this training moved to Fareham in 1959 for sailors, and officer radar training moved to Somerset in July 1960.

The site became the Royal Naval School of Meteorology and Oceanography in 1968.

Hydrography

Hydrography was taught in Devon, and any additional oceanography was taught at Fareham, at the Applied Oceanography and Meteorological Centre.

The site in Cornwall closed in 2003, and meteorological and oceanography training was moved to the RN School of Hydrography, in Devon; this site in Devon opened in the early 1960s. The RN Hydrography School received four survey motor boats in September 1996.[1] [2] [3]

The combined site is now the HMTU.

Commanders

Meteorology in the Royal Navy

After training, officers entered the Naval Weather Service. The Weather and Oceanographic Centre was in Hertfordshire, which is now the Joint Operational Meteorology Oceanography Centre.

Training

The meteorology course was known as METOC. Current training has six months of meteorology, followed by three months of hydrography.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Navy News September 1996, page 14
  2. Navy News April 2001, page 41
  3. Navy News September 1992, page 10
  4. Navy News February 2000, page 17