Patent Publication Number: US-11048006-B2

Title: Underwater seismic exploration with a helical conveyor and skid structure

Description:
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS 
     The present application claims the benefit of priority under 35 U.S.C. § 120 as a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/088,054 titled “UNDERWATER SEISMIC EXPLORATION WITH A HELICAL CONVEYOR AND SKID STRUCTURE”, filed on Mar. 31, 2016, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. 
    
    
     BACKGROUND 
     Seismic data may be evaluated to obtain information about subsurface features. The information can indicate geological profiles of a subsurface portion of earth, such as salt domes, bedrock, or stratigraphic traps, and can be interpreted to indicate a possible presence or absence of minerals, hydrocarbons, metals, or other elements or deposits. 
     SUMMARY 
     At least one aspect is directed to a system for acquiring seismic data from a seabed. The system includes a case having a cylindrical portion. The system includes a cap positioned adjacent to a first end of the case. The system includes a conveyor having a helix structure and provided within the case. The conveyor can receive an ocean bottom seismometer (“OBS”) unit at a first end of the conveyer and transport the OBS unit via the helix structure to a second end of the conveyor. A first distance between the first end of the conveyor and the cap can be less than a second distance between the second end of the conveyor and the cap. The conveyor can facilitate providing the OBS unit on the seabed to acquire the seismic data. 
     The system can include one or more fins. For example, the system can include a first fin or a first fin and a second fin. The first fin can extend from at least one of the cap or the case. The second find can extend from at least one of the cap or the case. The first fin can be separated from the second fin by a predetermined angle to control rotation or spin of the case through an aqueous medium. The first and second fins can control rotation or spin or dampen rotation or spin by exerting force or creating and controlling the exerted force. The exerted force can control rotation, impact steering, provide operational stability when the case is being towed or at-rest. Dampening rotation can include or refer to reducing rotational force or rotation by 5%, 10%, 20%, 25%, 30% or more. Dampening rotation can refer to or include reducing the rate of rotation, or preventing a full rotation. The OBS unit can be attached to the seabed, positioned on the seabed, put in contact with the seabed, coupled to the seabed, or otherwise connected to the seabed. For example, the OBS unit can be sufficiently connected to the seabed to collect seismic data from or via the seabed. 
     The case can include one or more openings to allow the OBS unit to pass through the case. For example, the case can include a first opening to receive the OBS unit at the first end of the conveyor, and a second opening to remove the OBS unit from the second end of the conveyor. The case can include a first gate configured to close the first opening and a second gate configured to obstruct the second opening. At least one of the first gate or the second gate can be under mechanical tension, such as spring loaded or piston activated. At least one of the first gate or the second gate can be open and closed along a vertical axis of the cylindrical portion. For example, an underwater vehicle can be configured to open or close the first gate or the second gate. 
     The cap can include a conical shape. A base of the cap can be coupled to the first end of the case. The first fin and the second fin can be positioned to generate drag in the aqueous medium to control the rotation of the case. The first fin can separated from the second fin by the predetermined angle to dampen rotation of the case when moved through the aqueous medium. The predetermined angle between the first fin and the second fin can be between 70 and 110 degrees. 
     The center of the helix structure can extend along an axis of the cylindrical portion of the case. The conveyor can include one or a plurality of portions coupled together to form the helix structure. The portions can include, for example, ⅛ turn portions, ⅕ turn portions, ¼ turn portions, ⅓ turn portions, ½ turn portions, full turn portions, or other sized portion. The helix structure can include a spiral pitch, which can include or refer to a substantially constant pitch such as a pitch that varies from one of the conveyor to another end of the conveyor by less than plus or minus 0.5 degrees, 1 degree, 2 degrees, 3 degrees, 5 degrees, 10 degrees, 15 degrees, or 20 degrees. 
     The system can include a second conveyor having a second helix structure and provided within the case. The second conveyor can include a first end that is a third distance between the cap, where the third distance is greater than the first distance. The case can include one or more openings to allow one or more OBS units to pass through the case and onto at least one of the first conveyor or the second conveyor. The second conveyor can include a second end that is a fourth distance from the cap, where the fourth distance is greater than the second distance. The first helix structure and the second helix structure can have the same constant spiral pitch. 
     The system can include a second cap coupled to a second end of the case opposite from the first end. The second cap can include a ballast. The system can include a support structure provided in the case, such as a pole, column, pillar, grooves in the case, ribbing, walls of the case, cabling, or skid structure. The support structure can extend along an axis of the cylindrical portion of the case and through a center of the helix structure. The support structure can be coupled to at least one of a first interior portion of the cap or a second interior portion of a second cap. The support structure can support the conveyor. 
     The system can include a runner protruding from, and extending along, a longitudinal axis of the cylindrical portion of the case. The system can include a beacon positioned proximate to the first fin or the second fin. The beacon can include at least one of an acoustic transponder or a light source (e.g., yellow light, white light). The system can include other types of beacons such as wireless beacons, wired beacons, magnetic beacons, radio frequency beacons, motion beacons, or color-based beacons. 
     The conveyor can include an unpowered gravity conveyor. The conveyor can provide the OBS unit to an underwater vehicle. The underwater vehicle can include a capture appliance to receive the OBS unit via an opening at the second end of the conveyor. The underwater vehicle can include a deployment device to place the OBS unit on the seabed to acquire the seismic data. 
     At least one aspect is directed to a system for acquiring seismic data from a seabed. The system can include a case having a first portion that is hydrodynamic and a second portion to produce drag to dampen rotation of the case moved through an aqueous medium. The system can include a conveyor having a helix structure and provided within the case. The conveyor can be positioned to receive an OBS unit at a first end of the conveyer and transport the OBS unit via the helix structure to a second end of the conveyor. 
     The case can include one or more openings. The case can include a first opening configured to receive the OBS unit at the first end of the conveyor. The case can include a second opening to remove the OBS unit from the second end of the conveyor. The first opening and the cap can be separated by a first distance. The second opening and the cap can be separated by a second distance. The first distance can be less than the second distance. The conveyor can include a gravity conveyor that is unpowered. 
     At least one aspect is directed to a system for acquiring seismic data from a seabed. The system can include a case having a cylindrical portion. The system can include a cap positioned adjacent to a first end of the case. The system can include a conveyor having a helix structure and provided within the case. The conveyor can receive an OBS unit at a first end of the conveyer and transport the OBS unit via the helix structure to a second end of the conveyor. The system can include an underwater vehicle comprising a capture appliance to receive the OBS unit via an opening at the second end of the conveyor. The system can include a deployment device of the underwater vehicle to place the OBS unit on the seabed to acquire the seismic data. 
     The system can include a first fin extending from at least one of the cap or the case. The system can include a second fin extending from at least one of the cap or the case. The first fin can be separated from the second fin by a predetermined angle to control rotation of the case through an aqueous medium. The first fin and the second fin can be configured to generate drag in the aqueous medium to control the rotation of the case. The underwater vehicle can retrieve the OBS unit from the seabed. 
     At least one aspect is directed to a system for acquiring seismic data from a seabed. The system can include a case having a cylindrical portion and one or more openings. The system can include a cap positioned adjacent to a first end of the case. The system can include a first conveyor having a helix structure and provided within the case. The first conveyor can be configured to receive one or more OBS units at a first end of the first conveyer and transport the one or more OBS units via the helix structure to a second end of the first conveyor. The system can include an underwater vehicle comprising a retrieval device to retrieve an OBS unit connected to the seabed. The OBS unit can store seismic data acquired via the seabed. The underwater vehicle can include a second conveyor to transfer the OBS unit retrieved from the seabed to the first conveyor in the case via the one or more openings of the case. 
     The system can include a first fin extending from at least one of the cap or the case. The system can include a second fin extending from at least one of the cap or the case. The first fin can be separated from the second fin by a predetermined angle to control rotation of the case through an aqueous medium. 
     The system can include a third conveyor having a helix structure and provided within the case. The retrieval device can be configured to retrieve a second OBS unit connected to the seabed. The second conveyor can be configured to transfer the second OBS unit retrieved from the seabed to the third conveyor in the case via the one or more openings of the case. 
     At least one aspect is directed to a system to deploy OBS units. The system can include a case having a first portion to produce drag to dampen rotation of the case moved through an aqueous medium. The system can include a first conveyor provided within the case to support one or more OBS units. The first conveyor can have a helix structure. The case can include a first opening at a first end of the first conveyor, and a second opening at a second end of the first conveyor. The system can include a base to receive at least a portion of the case. The system can include a second conveyor positioned external to the case to support the one or more OBS units. The second conveyor can be constructed to move a first OBS unit of the one or more OBS units into the first opening at the first end of the first conveyor. The first conveyor can be constructed to receive the first OBS unit and direct the first OBS unit towards the second opening at the second end of the first conveyor. 
     The system can include an elevator configured to position the second conveyor to align the second conveyor with the first opening. The system can include a first gate configured to close the first opening. The second conveyor can be configured to open the first gate. The second conveyor can open the first gate to remove the first OBS unit from the helix structure. 
     The system can include a crane. The system can include a cable coupled to the crane and the case. The crane can raise, lower, or support the case via the cable. The crane can lower the case loaded with the one or more OBS units onto the seabed via the cable. The crane can lower the case loaded with the one or more OBS units into the aqueous medium. The system can include a fin extending from the case. The fin can be configured to create force as the case moves through the aqueous medium to dampen rotation of the case. The base can be configured to contact the seabed and support the case on the seabed. 
     In some embodiments, the helix structure can be referred to as a first helix structure and the one or more OBS units can be referred to as a first one or more OBS units. The system can include a third conveyor having a second helix structure provided within the case. The third conveyor can be configured to support a second one or more OBS units. The second one or more OBS units can be different from the first one or more OBS units. The second one or more OBS units can be mutually exclusive from the first one or more OBS units. The system can include a third opening of the case at a third end of the second conveyor. The system can include an elevator configured to raise or lower the second conveyor. The elevator can align the second conveyor with the first opening to load the first one or more OBS units onto the first conveyor via the first opening. The elevator can align the second conveyor with third opening to load the second one or more OBS units onto the third conveyor via the third opening. The first conveyor can be an unpowered gravity conveyor, and the second conveyor can be a powered conveyor. 
     At least one aspect is directed to a method for deploying OBS units. The method includes providing a case. The method includes providing a first conveyor within the case. The first conveyor can have a helix structure configured to support one or more OBS units. The case can include a first opening at a first end of the first conveyor and a second opening at a second end of the first conveyor. The method includes providing a base to hold the case in a substantially vertical position. The method includes providing a second conveyor positioned external to the case and configured to support the one or more OBS units. The method includes loading, by the second conveyor, a first OBS unit of the one or more OBS units into the case via the first opening at the first end of the first conveyor. The method includes directing, by the first conveyor, the first OBS unit received from the second conveyor towards the second opening at the second end of the first conveyor. 
     The case can include a first portion to produce drag to dampen rotation of the case moved through an aqueous medium. The method can include aligning, by an elevator, the second conveyor with the first opening. The method can include opening, by the second conveyor, a first gate closing the first opening. The method can include removing, by the second conveyor, the first OBS unit from the first conveyor. 
     The method can include a crane positioning the case into the aqueous medium. The crane can be coupled to the case via a cable. The method can include the crane positioning the case onto the seabed. The case can include the one or more OBS units. The method can include the crane positioning the case loaded with the one or more OBS units into the aqueous medium. The method can include a fin creating force as the case moves through the aqueous medium to dampen rotation of the case. The fin can extend from the case. The method can include the base contacting the seabed. The method can include the base supporting the case on the seabed. 
     In some embodiments, the helix structure is a first helix structure, and the one or more OBS units are a first one or more OBS units. The method can include providing, within the case, a third conveyor having a second helix structure. The method can include loading a second one or more OBS units onto the third conveyor. 
     At least one aspect of the present disclosure is directed to a system to acquire seismic data from a seabed. The system includes an underwater vehicle comprising a skid structure. The system includes a conveyor provided in the skid structure. The conveyor has a first end and a second end opposite the first end. The system includes a capture appliance provided at the first end of the conveyor. The capture appliance includes an arm to close to hold a case storing one or more OBS units. The capture appliance can open to release the case. The capture appliance can include an alignment mechanism to align an opening of the case with the first end of the conveyor. The system can include a deployment appliance at the second end of the conveyor to place an OBS unit of the one or more OBS units onto the seabed to acquire seismic data from the seabed. 
     The conveyor can include a belt or a plurality of rollers to move an OBS unit of the one or more OBS units from the first end of the conveyor to the second end of the conveyor. The arm can include one or more arms, such as a first arm and a second arm. The first arm can be coupled to a first portion of the conveyor. The second arm can be opposite from the first arm, and be coupled to a second portion of the conveyor. The first and second portions of the conveyor can be same or different portions of the conveyor. The first arm and the second arm can be operational to move from an open position to a closed position to capture the case. The first arm and the second arm can move from the closed position to the open position to release the case. For example, the first arm and the second arm can form, define, include, or otherwise provide a clamp. 
     The alignment mechanism can include a notch that can hold the case in a predetermined orientation. The notch can receive a protrusion extending along the case to hold the case in the predetermined orientation. The notch can include a tapered notch. The alignment mechanism can include a protrusion that holds the case in a predetermined orientation. The protrusion can be further configured to insert at least in part into a notch on the case to hold the case in the predetermined orientation. 
     The system can include a sensor configured to detect a signal received from the case. The signal can include at least one of an acoustic signal or a light signal. The ping can indicate a position of the underwater vehicle in an aqueous medium. The ping can indicate a depth of the underwater vehicle in the aqueous medium relative to the case. The underwater vehicle can include a remotely operated vehicle or an autonomously operated vehicle. The underwater vehicle can include a retrieval mechanism to retrieve the OBS unit of the one or more OBS units from the seabed. The OBS unit of the one or more OBS units can store, in memory, the seismic data acquired from the seabed. 
     The system can include a gate adjacent to the deployment appliance. The gate can be configured to open from a closed position to deploy the OBS unit of the one or more OBS units onto the seabed. The underwater vehicle can open or close the gate. 
     At least one aspect is directed to a system to acquire seismic data from a seabed. The system can include an underwater vehicle having a skid structure. The system can include a conveyor provided in the skid structure. The conveyor can have a first end and a second end opposite the first end. The system can include a capture appliance provided at the first end of the conveyor. The capture appliance including an arm to close to hold a case having one or more ocean bottom seismometer (“OBS”) units on a helix structure in the case, and to open to release the case. The capture appliance includes an alignment mechanism to align an opening of the case with the first end of the conveyor. The conveyor can receive, via the opening of the case and from an end of the helix structure in the case, an OBS unit of the one or more OBS units. The system can include a deployment appliance located or positioned at or near the second end of the conveyor. The deployment appliance includes a ramp that places the OBS unit of the one or more OBS units onto the seabed to acquire seismic data from the seabed via the OBS unit of the one or more OBS units. 
     The conveyor can include a belt or a plurality of rollers to move the OBS unit of the one or more OBS units from a first end of the conveyor to a second end of the conveyor. A portion of the ramp can contact the seabed. The underwater vehicle can include a retrieval mechanism to retrieve the OBS unit of the one or more OBS units from the seabed. The OBS unit of the one or more OBS units can store, in memory, the seismic data acquired from the seabed. 
     At least one aspect is directed to a method for acquiring seismic data from a seabed. The method can include a sensor of an underwater vehicle identifying a case constructed to store one or more ocean bottom seismometer (“OBS”) units. The underwater vehicle can include a conveyor and an arm. The method includes positioning the underwater vehicle so that the arm is in an open state above a cap of the case. The method includes closing, by an actuator of the underwater vehicle, the arm. The method includes moving, by the underwater vehicle, the arm toward a bottom portion of the case opposite the cap. An opening of the case can be aligned with the conveyor of the underwater vehicle. The method includes receiving, by the conveyor via the opening of the case, a first OBS unit of the one or more OBS units. The method includes placing, by the underwater vehicle, the first OBS unit on the seabed to acquire seismic data from the seabed. 
     The sensor can detect a ping from a transponder on the case. The underwater vehicle can use the ping to position the arm in the open state above the case. The underwater vehicle can determine a depth of the underwater vehicle relative to the case based on the ping. The underwater vehicle can move the arm in the open state towards a cable connected to the cap of the case that supports the case in an aqueous medium. 
     The case can include a first portion that is hydrodynamic and a second portion configured to produce drag to prevent rotation of the case through an aqueous medium. The case can include a portion having a conical shape, a domed shape, or a hydrodynamic shape. The method can include locking, in a notch of the arm, a runner of the case to align the opening of the case with the conveyor. 
     A gate on the case that blocks the first OBS unit from moving through the opening of the case can be mechanically opened. For example, the gate can be spring-loaded. The underwater vehicle can open the gate on the case. The underwater vehicle can run, initiate, start, operate, or other cause the conveyor to retrieve the first OBS unit from the case. The conveyor can receive, via the opening of the case, the first OBS unit from a helix structure in the case supporting the one or more OBS units. The conveyor can receive, via the opening of the case, a second OBS unit of the one or more OBS units. The second OBS unit can move down the helix structure towards the opening. The conveyor can receive, via the opening, a third OBS unit of the one or more OBS units. The third OBS unit can move down the helix structure towards the opening responsive to the conveyor receiving the first OBS unit and the second OBS unit. 
     The method can include inserting, by a second conveyor, the first OBS unit into the case via a second opening of the case. A helix structure in the can receive the first OBS unit via the second opening. The first OBS unit can move towards the opening via the helix structure. The helix structure can include an unpowered gravity conveyor. The method can include placing the case on a base configured to support the case. 
     The method can include providing one or more OBS units for reception by one or more helix structures in the case via one or more openings of the case. For example, a single opening can be used to provide OBS units to multiple helix structures within the case. In another example, a first opening in the case can be used to provide OBS units to a first helix structure in the case, and a second opening in the case can be used to provide OBS units to a second helix structure in the case. The first and second openings can be located above one another, adjacent one another, near one another, in a horizontal plane, vertical plane or diagonal plane. 
     The method can include inserting the first OBS unit into the case placed on the receptacle. In some embodiments, the method can include inserting, by the second conveyor, a second OBS unit of the one or more OBS units into the case via a third opening of the case. A second helix structure in the case can receive the second OBS unit via the third opening. The second OBS unit can move, via the second helix structure, towards a fourth opening of the case below the second opening. 
     The method can include placing the case on a receptacle configured to support the case. The receptacle can be in contact with the seabed. The conveyor of the underwater vehicle can receive the first OBS unit from the case on the receptacle. 
     At least one aspect is directed to a system to acquire seismic data from a seabed. The system includes an underwater vehicle having a sensor. The sensor can be used to identify a case. The case can have a hydrodynamic shape and store one or more OBS units. The underwater vehicle can have an arm and an actuator to position the arm in an open state above a cap of the case, or close the arm. The underwater vehicle can be configured to move the arm to a bottom portion of the case opposite the cap. The underwater vehicle can move the arm such that an opening of the case is aligned with the conveyor of the underwater vehicle. The conveyor can be configured to receive, via the opening of the case, a first OBS unit of the one or more OBS units. The conveyor can move the first OBS unit to the seabed to acquire seismic data from the seabed. 
     The case can include a first portion that is hydrodynamic and a second portion configured to produce drag to dampen rotation of the case through an aqueous medium. The case can include a helix structure to store the one or more OBS units and convey the one or more OBS units from a second opening of the case to the opening of the case. A first distance between the opening and the cap can be less than a second distance between the second opening and the cap. The case can include a plurality of helix structures to store the one or more OBS units. The underwater vehicle can include at least one of a remotely operated vehicle or an autonomously operated vehicle. 
     In some embodiments, the case can be a solid, continuously closed case. In some embodiments, the case can include perforations, holes, a mesh, a skeleton type structure, or a lattice structure configured to contain OBS units. 
    
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
       The details of one or more embodiments of the subject matter described in this specification are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, aspects, and advantages of the subject matter will become apparent from the description, the drawings, and the claims. The drawings are not intended to be drawn to scale. Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements. For purposes of clarity, not every component may be labeled in every drawing. In the drawings: 
         FIG. 1  is an isometric schematic view of an embodiment of a seismic operation in deep water. 
         FIG. 2A  is a system for acquiring seismic data, in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 2B  is a side perspective view of a system for acquiring seismic data, in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 2C  is a top perspective view of a system for acquiring seismic data, in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 3  illustrates a conveyor provided for the system for acquiring seismic data, in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 4A  is a system for acquiring seismic data, in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 4B  is a side perspective view of a system for acquiring seismic data, in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 4C  is a top perspective view of a system for acquiring seismic data, in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 5  illustrates multiple conveyors provided for the system for acquiring seismic data, in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 6A  illustrates a system to transfer units to or from a case in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 6B  illustrates a system to transfer units to or from a case in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 7  illustrates a system to transfer units to or from a seabed in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 8A  illustrates a skid system to acquire seismic data from a seabed in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 8B  illustrates a skid system to acquire seismic data from a seabed in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 8C  illustrates a skid system to acquire seismic data from a seabed in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 9  illustrates a system to acquire seismic data from a seabed, in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 10  illustrates a system to acquire seismic data from a seabed, in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 11  illustrates a system to acquire seismic data from a seabed, in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 12  illustrates a system to acquire seismic data from a seabed, in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 13  illustrates a system to acquire seismic data from a seabed, in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 14  illustrates a system to acquire seismic data from a seabed, in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 15  illustrates a system to acquire seismic data from a seabed, in accordance with an embodiment. 
         FIG. 16  is a flow diagram of an embodiment of a method of acquiring seismic data from a seabed. 
         FIG. 17  is a block diagram illustrating a general architecture for a computer system that may be employed to implement various elements of the embodiments shown in  FIGS. 1-16 . 
     
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
     Following below are more detailed descriptions of various concepts related to, and implementations of, methods, apparatuses, and systems of determining or estimating the depth of one or more receivers such as seismic data acquisition units associated with a seismic survey, as well as determining or estimating water column transit velocity of an acoustic or other signal that propagates to or from a seismic source through a water column. The various concepts introduced above and discussed in greater detail below may be implemented in any of numerous ways. 
     Systems, methods, and apparatus of the present disclosure generally relate to acquiring seismic data from or via a seabed. The system can use a torpedo shaped transfer system or transfer device to transfer or transport OBS units from a location above the surface of water to a location below the surface of water at a seabed. The torpedo shaped transfer system can also be used to retrieve OBS units from the seabed or a location below the surface of water, back to a location above the surface of water, such as onto a vessel. The torpedo shaped transfer system or device can include a cylindrical case with a spiral structure, helix structure, spiral slide, or coil provided within the case. The case can include one or more fins or protrusions configured to produce or exert a force (e.g., drag) that can stabilize rotation of the case (e.g., within 10 degrees of rotation). In some embodiments, the case may be a hydrodynamic shape configured to produce the drag to stabilize rotation without using fins. A height of the cylindrical case can be greater than a diameter of the cylinder. The helix structure can provide an unpowered, gravity conveyor that allows OBS units to slide from a top portion of the helix structure to a bottom portion of the helix structure to facilitate loading and unloading the transfer device. 
     Referring now to  FIG. 1 , an isometric schematic view of an embodiment of a seismic operation in deep water facilitated by a first marine vessel  5  is shown. The data processing system can obtain the seismic data via the seismic operation. While this figure illustrates a deep water seismic operation, the systems and methods described herein can use seismic data obtained via streamer data, land-based seismic operations. In this example, the first vessel  5  is positioned on a surface  10  of a water column  15  and includes a deck  20  which supports operational equipment. At least a portion of the deck  20  includes space for a plurality of sensor device racks  90  where seismic sensor devices (or seismic data acquisition units or nodes) are stored. The sensor device racks  90  may also include data retrieval devices or sensor recharging devices. 
     The deck  20  also includes one or more cranes  25 A,  25 B attached thereto to facilitate transfer of at least a portion of the operational equipment, such as an autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV), autonomously operated vehicle (AOV), an ROV or seismic sensor devices, from the deck  20  to the water column  15 . For example, a crane  25 A coupled to the deck  20  is configured to lower and raise an ROV  35 A, which transfers and positions one or more sensor devices  30  (e.g., OBS units) on a seabed  55 . The ROV  35 A can be coupled to the first vessel  5  by a tether  46 A and an umbilical cable  44 A that provides power, communications, and control to the ROV  35 A. A tether management system (TMS)  50 A is also coupled between the umbilical cable  44 A and the tether  46 A. Generally, the TMS  50 A may be utilized as an intermediary, subsurface platform from which to operate the ROV  35 A. For most ROV  35 A operations at or near the seabed  55 , the TMS  50 A can be positioned approximately 50 feet above seabed  55  and can pay out tether  46 A as needed for ROV  35 A to move freely above seabed  55  in order to position and transfer seismic sensor devices  30  thereon. The seabed  55  can include or refer to a continental shelf. 
     A crane  25 B may be coupled (e.g., via a latch, anchor, nuts and bolts, screw, suction cup, magnet, or other fastener.) to a stern of the first vessel  5 , or other locations on the first vessel  5 . Each of the cranes  25 A,  25 B may be any lifting device or launch and recovery system (LARS) adapted to operate in a marine environment. The crane  25 B may be coupled to a seismic sensor transfer device  100  by a cable  70 . The transfer device  100  may be a drone, a skid structure, a basket, or any device capable of housing one or more sensor devices  30  therein. The transfer device  100  may be a structure configured as a magazine adapted to house and transport one or more sensor devices  30 . The transfer device  100  may be configured as a sensor device storage rack for transfer of sensor devices  30  from the first vessel  5  to the ROV  35 A, and from the ROV  35 A to the first vessel  5 . The transfer device  100  may include an on-board power supply, a motor or gearbox, or a propulsion system. In some embodiments, the transfer device  100  may not include any integral power devices or not require any external or internal power source. In some embodiments, the cable  70  may provide power or control to the transfer device  100 . In some embodiments, the transfer device  100  can operate without external power or control. In some embodiments, the cable  70  may include an umbilical, a tether, a cord, a wire, a rope, and the like, that is configured to support, tow, position, power or control the transfer device  100 . 
     The ROV  35 A can include a seismic sensor device storage compartment  40  that is configured to store one or more seismic sensor devices  30  therein for a deployment or retrieval operation. The storage compartment  40  may include a magazine, a rack, or a container configured to store the seismic sensor devices. The storage compartment  40  may also include a conveyor, such as a movable platform having the seismic sensor devices thereon, such as a carousel or linear platform configured to support and move the seismic sensor devices  30  therein. In one embodiment, the seismic sensor devices  30  may be deployed on the seabed  55  and retrieved therefrom by operation of the movable platform. The ROV  35 A may be positioned at a predetermined location above or on the seabed  55  and seismic sensor devices  30  are rolled, conveyed, or otherwise moved out of the storage compartment  40  at the predetermined location. In some embodiments, the seismic sensor devices  30  may be deployed and retrieved from the storage compartment  40  by a robotic device  60 , such as a robotic arm, an end effector or a manipulator, disposed on the ROV  35 A. 
     The seismic sensor device  30  may be referred to as seismic data acquisition unit  30  or node  30 . The seismic data acquisition unit  30  can record seismic data. The seismic data acquisition unit  30  may include one or more of at least one geophone, at least one power source (e.g., a battery, external solar panel), at least one clock, at least one tilt meter, at least one environmental sensor, at least one seismic data recorder, at least global positioning system sensor, at least one wireless or wired transmitter, at least one wireless or wired receiver, at least one wireless or wired transceiver, or at least one processor. The seismic sensor device  30  may be a self-contained unit such that all electronic connections are within the unit. During recording, the seismic sensor device  30  may operate in a self-contained manner such that the node does not require external communication or control. The seismic sensor device  30  may include several geophones configured to detect acoustic waves that are reflected by subsurface lithological formation or hydrocarbon deposits. The seismic sensor device  30  may further include one or more geophones that are configured to vibrate the seismic sensor device  30  or a portion of the seismic sensor device  30  in order to detect a degree of coupling between a surface of the seismic sensor device  30  and a ground surface. One or more component of the seismic sensor device  30  may attach to a gimbaled platform having multiple degrees of freedom. For example, the clock may be attached to the gimbaled platform to minimize the effects of gravity on the clock. 
     For example, in a deployment operation, a first plurality of seismic sensor devices, comprising one or more sensor devices  30 , may be loaded into the storage compartment  40  while on the first vessel  5  in a pre-loading operation. The ROV  35 A, having the storage compartment coupled thereto, is then lowered to a subsurface position in the water column  15 . The ROV  35 A utilizes commands from personnel on the first vessel  5  to operate along a course to transfer the first plurality of seismic sensor devices  30  from the storage compartment  40  and deploy the individual sensor devices  30  at selected locations on the seabed  55  or ground surface  55  or sea floor  55  or earth surface  55  in a land based deployment. Once the storage compartment  40  is depleted of the first plurality of seismic sensor devices  30 , the transfer device  100  (or transfer system  100 ,  200  or  400 ) can be used to ferry a second plurality of seismic sensor devices  30  as a payload from first vessel  5  to the ROV  35 A. 
     The transfer system  100  may be preloaded with a second plurality of seismic sensor devices  30  while on or adjacent the first vessel  5 . When a suitable number of seismic sensor devices  30  are loaded onto the transfer device  100 , the transfer device  100  may be lowered by crane  25 B to a selected depth in the water column  15 . The ROV  35 A and transfer device  100  are mated at a subsurface location to allow transfer of the second plurality of seismic sensor devices  30  from the transfer device  100  to the storage compartment  40 . When the transfer device  100  and ROV  35 A are mated, the second plurality of seismic sensor devices  30  contained in the transfer device  100  are transferred to the storage compartment  40  of the ROV  35 A. Once the storage compartment  40  is reloaded, the ROV  35 A and transfer device  100  are detached or unmated and seismic sensor device placement by ROV  35 A may resume. In one embodiment, reloading of the storage compartment  40  is provided while the first vessel  5  is in motion. If the transfer device  100  is empty after transfer of the second plurality of seismic sensor devices  30 , the transfer device  100  may be raised by the crane  25 B to the vessel  5  where a reloading operation replenishes the transfer device  100  with a third plurality of seismic sensor devices  30 . The transfer device  100  may then be lowered to a selected depth when the storage compartment  40  needs to be reloaded. This process may repeat as needed until a desired number of seismic sensor devices  30  have been deployed. 
     Using the transfer device  100  to reload the ROV  35 A at a subsurface location reduces the time required to place the seismic sensor devices  30  on the seabed  55 , or “planting” time, as the ROV  35 A is not raised and lowered to the surface  10  for seismic sensor device reloading. Further, mechanical stresses placed on equipment utilized to lift and lower the ROV  35 A are minimized as the ROV  35 A may be operated below the surface  10  for longer periods. The reduced lifting and lowering of the ROV  35 A may be particularly advantageous in foul weather or rough sea conditions. Thus, the lifetime of equipment may be enhanced as the ROV  35 A and related equipment are not raised above surface  10 , which may cause the ROV  35 A and related equipment to be damaged, or pose a risk of injury to the vessel personnel. 
     Likewise, in a retrieval operation, the ROV  35 A can utilize commands from personnel on the first vessel  5  to retrieve each seismic sensor device  30  that was previously placed on seabed  55 . The retrieved seismic sensor devices  30  are placed into the storage compartment  40  of the ROV  35 A. In some embodiments, the ROV  35 A may be sequentially positioned adjacent each seismic sensor device  30  on the seabed  55  and the seismic sensor devices  30  are rolled, conveyed, or otherwise moved from the seabed  55  to the storage compartment  40 . In some embodiments, the seismic sensor devices  30  may be retrieved from the seabed  55  by a robotic device  60  disposed on the ROV  35 A. 
     Once the storage compartment  40  is full or contains a pre-determined number of seismic sensor devices  30 , the transfer device  100  can be lowered to a position below the surface  10  and mated with the ROV  35 A. The transfer device  100  may be lowered by crane  25 B to a selected depth in the water column  15 , and the ROV  35 A and transfer device  100  are mated at a subsurface location. Once mated, the retrieved seismic sensor devices  30  contained in the storage compartment  40  are transferred to the transfer device  100 . Once the storage compartment  40  is depleted of retrieved sensor devices, the ROV  35 A and transfer device  100  are detached and sensor device retrieval by ROV  35 A may resume. Thus, the transfer device  100  can ferry the retrieved seismic sensor devices  30  as a payload to the first vessel  5 , allowing the ROV  35 A to continue collection of the seismic sensor devices  30  from the seabed  55 . In this manner, sensor device retrieval time is significantly reduced as the ROV  35 A is not raised and lowered for sensor device unloading. Further, mechanical stresses placed on equipment related to the ROV  35 A are minimized as the ROV  35 A may be subsurface for longer periods. 
     In this embodiment, the first vessel  5  may travel in a first direction  75 , such as in the +X direction, which may be a compass heading or other linear or predetermined direction. The first direction  75  may also account for or include drift caused by wave action, current(s) or wind speed and direction. In one embodiment, the plurality of seismic sensor devices  30  are placed on the seabed  55  in selected locations, such as a plurality of rows R n  in the X direction (R 1  and R 2  are shown) or columns C n  in the Y direction (C 1 , C 2 , C 3 , and C 4  are shown), wherein n equals an integer. In one embodiment, the rows R n  and columns C n  define a grid or array, wherein each row R n  comprises a receiver line in the width of a sensor array (X direction) or each column C n  comprises a receiver line in a length of the sensor array (Y direction). The distance between adjacent sensor devices  30  in the rows is shown as distance L R  and the distance between adjacent sensor devices  30  in the columns is shown as distance L C . While a substantially square pattern is shown, other patterns may be formed on the seabed  55 . Other patterns include non-linear receiver lines or non-square patterns. The pattern(s) may be pre-determined or result from other factors, such as topography of the seabed  55 . In some embodiments, the distances L R  and L C  may be substantially equal (e.g., plus or minus 10% of each other) and may include dimensions between about 60 meters to about 400 meters. In some embodiments, the distances L R  and L C  may be different. In some embodiments, the distances L R  or L C  may include dimensions between about 400 meters to about 1100 meters. The distance between adjacent seismic sensor devices  30  may be predetermined or result from topography of the seabed  55  as described above. 
     The first vessel  5  is operated at a speed, such as an allowable or safe speed for operation of the first vessel  5  and any equipment being towed by the first vessel  5 . The speed may take into account any weather conditions, such as wind speed and wave action, as well as currents in the water column  15 . The speed of the vessel may also be determined by any operations equipment that is suspended by, attached to, or otherwise being towed by the first vessel  5 . For example, the speed is typically limited by the drag coefficients of components of the ROV  35 A, such as the TMS  50 A and umbilical cable  44 A, as well as any weather conditions or currents in the water column  15 . As the components of the ROV  35 A are subject to drag that is dependent on the depth of the components in the water column  15 , the first vessel speed may operate in a range of less than about 1 knot. For example, when two receiver lines (rows R 1  and R 2 ) are being laid, the first vessel includes a first speed of between about 0.2 knots and about 0.6 knots. In some embodiments, the first speed includes an average speed of between about 0.25 knots, which includes intermittent speeds of less than 0.25 knots and speeds greater than about 1 knot, depending on weather conditions, such as wave action, wind speeds, or currents in the water column  15 . 
     During a seismic survey, one receiver line, such as row R 1  may be deployed. When the single receiver line is completed a second vessel  80  is used to provide a source signal. The second vessel  80  is provided with a source device  85 , which may be a device capable of producing acoustical signals or vibrational signals suitable for obtaining the survey data. The source signal propagates to the seabed  55  and a portion of the signal is reflected back to the seismic sensor devices  30 . The second vessel  80  may be required to make multiple passes, for example at least four passes, per a single receiver line (row R 1  in this example). During the time the second vessel  80  is making the passes, the first vessel  5  continues deployment of a second receiver line. However, the time involved in making the passes by the second vessel  80  can be shorter than the deployment time of the second receiver line. This causes a lag time in the seismic survey as the second vessel  80  sits idle while the first vessel  5  is completing the second receiver line. 
     In some embodiments, the first vessel  5  can utilize an ROV  35 A to lay sensor devices to form a first set of two receiver lines (rows R 1  and R 2 ) in any number of columns, which may produce a length of each receiver line of up to and including several miles. The two receiver lines (rows R 1  and R 2 ) can be substantially parallel, e.g. within +/−20 degrees of parallel. When a single directional pass of the first vessel  5  is completed and the first set (rows R 1 , R 2 ) of seismic sensor devices  30  are laid to a predetermined length, the second vessel  80 , provided with the source device  85 , is utilized to provide the source signal. The second vessel  80  may make eight or more passes along the two receiver lines to complete the seismic survey of the two rows R 1  and R 2 . 
     While the second vessel  80  is shooting along the two rows R 1  and R 2 , the first vessel  5  may turn 180 degrees and travel in the -X direction in order to lay seismic sensor devices  30  in another two rows adjacent the rows R 1  and R 2 , thereby forming a second set of two receiver lines. The second vessel  80  may then make another series of passes along the second set of receiver lines while the first vessel  5  turns 180 degrees to travel in the +X direction to lay another set of receiver lines. The process may repeat until a specified area of the seabed  55  has been surveyed. Thus, the idle time of the second vessel  80  is minimized as the deployment time for laying receiver lines is cut approximately in half by deploying two rows in one pass of the vessel  5 . 
     Although only two rows R 1  and R 2  are shown, the sensor device  30  layout is not limited to this configuration as the ROV  35 A may be adapted to layout more than two rows of sensor devices in a single directional tow. For example, the ROV  35 A may be controlled to lay out between three and six rows of sensor devices  30 , or an even greater number of rows in a single directional tow. The width of a “one pass” run of the first vessel  5  to layout the width of the sensor array is typically limited by the length of the tether  46 A or the spacing (distance L R ) between sensor devices  30 . 
       FIG. 2A  is a system for acquiring seismic data in accordance with an embodiment. The system  200  includes a case  202 . The system  200  includes a cap  204  positioned adjacent to a first end of the case  200 . The system  200  can include a conveyor  302  (shown in  FIG. 3 ). The conveyor  302  can have a helical shape. 
     The system  200  can include a portion to produce drag as the case  202  moves through an aqueous medium. For example, the system  200  (e.g., a marine seismic OBS storage case) can include an element to control rotation, such as a steering element, stabilization member, a fin, extrusion, or protrusion. The system  200  can include a first fin  206  extending from at least one of the cap  204  or the case  202 . The system  200  can include a second fin  208  extending from at least one of the cap  204  or the case  202 . The first fin  206  can be separated from the second fin  208  by a predetermined angle  210  to control rotation, control motion, or create a force to be exerted on the case  202  to control a dynamic or motion of the case  202  as it moves through an aqueous medium. Thus, the system  200  can be constructed and configured without any fins, with a single fin, or with a plurality of fins. 
     In further detail, the system  200  includes a case  202 . The case  202  can be made from or composed of one or more materials that are suitable for use in an aqueous environment. For example, the case can include one or more of plastics, metals, fiberglass, PolyVinyl Chloride, steel, iron, composite materials, steel-reinforced cement, or aluminum. The material used to make the case can be selected based on a coefficient of friction of the material. For example, the material can be selected in order to reduce the friction or drag force caused by the case  202  as the case  202  moves through the aqueous medium. The case can be polished or smoothed to reduce drag. 
     In some embodiments, the case  202  can be formed as a continuous, solid structure. The case  202  can be an open-ended case at one or both ends, or a closed-ended case at one or both ends. The case  202  can include an exterior surface that is a continuous sheet of material, closed or non-porous. In some embodiments, the surface of the case  202  can include a porous structure. For example, the case  202  can include perforations, holes, a mesh, a skeleton type structure, or a lattice structure. The case  202  can be constructed to hold or contain one or more OBS units within the case such that the OBS units do not fall out of the case while the case is transported or moved from one position to another. 
     The case  202  can be constructed to be hydrodynamic in order to travel through an aqueous medium, such as an ocean, sea, lake, river, shore, intertidal zones, or other body of water. Hydrodynamic can refer to a shape that facilitates the case moving through the aqueous medium by reducing drag. Drag or drag force can include one or more of hydrodynamic drag, pressure drag, form drag, profile drag, or aerodynamic drag. Drag can refer to the force on an object that resists the motion of the object through a fluid, such as water. For example, drag can refer to the portion of the drag force that is due to inertia of the fluid, such as the resistance of the fluid to being pushed aside as the case  202  is moved through the aqueous medium. 
     The drag force can be determined using the following equation: R=½ρCAv2, where R refers to drag force; p refers to the density of the fluid or aqueous medium (e.g., ocean water can have a density of 1027 kHz/m3 due to the salt in the ocean); C refers to a coefficient of drag that takes into account factors such as shape, texture, viscosity, compressibility, lift, or boundary layer separation; A refers to the cross sectional area projected in the direction of motion; v refers to the speed of the case  202  as it moves through the aqueous medium (e.g., the speed can be the magnitude of the velocity of the case relative to the aqueous medium). 
     The system  200  can include one or more caps  204  positioned adjacent to a first end of the case  200 . In some embodiments, the case  202  and cap  204  can be a single component. In some embodiments, the case  202  and cap  204  can be separate components that are assembled together, connected, coupled, joined or otherwise affixed adjacent to one another. The cap  204  can be connected, coupled, joined or otherwise affixed to the case  202  in an irremovable manner or a removable manner. For example, the cap  204  can be fixed to the case  202  using one or more screws, bolts, nuts, latches, magnets, adhesives, solder, pins, clips, a tongue and groove joint, or a mechanical splice. In some embodiments, the cap  204  can be screwed onto the case  202 . For example, one of the case  202  or the cap  204  can include a raised helical thread, while the other of the case  202  or the cap  204  can include a helical groove to receive the raised helical thread. The cap  204  can be fastened to the case  202 . 
     The cap  204  can be formed of the same or different material as the case  202 . The cap  204  can be designed and constructed to generate more or less drag than the case  202 . In some embodiments, the cap  204  can be designed and constructed to generate greater drag force than the case  202 . In some embodiments, the cap  204  can have a shape, such as a cone, dome, hemisphere, flat, prism, pyramid, triangular pyramid, or square pyramid. The base of the cap  204  or footprint of the cap  204  can match or substantially match (e.g., within plus or minus 20%) a footprint of an end of the case  202  such that the base can be connected or coupled to the end of the case  202 . The cap can be filed with a material, such as foam or syntactic foam. Syntactic foams can include composite materials synthesized by filling a metal, polymer, or ceramic matrix with hollow particles such as microballoons. 
     The system  200  can include a second cap  228  positioned adjacent to a second end of the case  202 . For example, the second cap  228  can be at a bottom end of the case  202  when the case is oriented in an upright manner. The second cap  228  can include, e.g., a weighted cap such as a ballast. The second cap  228  can be weighted using a material (e.g., a heavy material with a density greater than water, such as greater than 1000 kg/m 3 , 1500 kg/m 3 , 2000 kg/m 3 , 3000 kg/m 3 , or 4000 kg/m 3 ) with a predetermined density in order to facilitate balancing the case in an upright manner, adjust buoyancy, drag, or other dynamic or static parameters of the case  202 . For example, the second cap  228  can include a weight to provide negative buoyancy for the system  200  (e.g., including the cap  204 , case  202 , and second cap  228 ). The materials can include, e.g., gravel, sand, iron, lead, or stone. The second cap  228  can be formed of one or more materials similar to that of cap  204 . The second cap  228  can be connected to the case  204  using one or more techniques used to connect cap  204  to the case  202 . The second cap  228  can have a same or different shape than cap  202 . For example, cap  204  can be conical shaped, and cap  228  can be hemispherical or dome shaped. In another example, both cap  204  and cap  228  can be dome shaped, or both cap  204  and cap  228  can be conical. 
     The system  200  can include a portion configured to control rotation of the case as the case moves through an aqueous medium. For example, a portion of the case can be configured or shaped in such a manner as to produce or exert force, such as drag, as the case moves through water. This force can facilitate stabilizing the case or limiting rotation of the case as the case moves through the water. The system  200  can include one or more fins that can be configured to control rotation of the case through an aqueous medium, dampen rotation, or otherwise exert force or create force to manipulate the dynamics of the case  202 . Dampening rotation can include or refer to reducing rotational force or rotation by 5%, 10%, 20%, 25%, 30% or more. Dampening rotation can refer to or include reducing the rate of rotation, or preventing a full rotation. In some embodiments, the system  200  can include a first fin  206  extending from at least one of the cap  204  or the case  202 . The system  200  can include a second fin  208  extending from at least one of the cap  204  or the case  202 . The first fin  206  can be separated from the second fin  208  by a predetermined angle  210  to control rotation, control motion, or create a force (e.g., drag) to be exerted on the case  202  to control a dynamic or motion of the case  202  as it moves through an aqueous medium. The predetermined angle  210  can be determined based on an amount of drag to generate. The case  202  can be referred to as being phase-locked due to the drag force exerted by the fins canceling out a rotational force to thereby stabilize or dampen the rotation of the case. 
     The predetermined angle  210  can be determined based one or more of ρ, C, A; or v. For example, increasing the predetermined angle may increase the A, the cross sectional area projected in the direction of motion, which may increase the drag force exerted by the case  202  (including the one or more fins). The predetermined angle can include an angle in the range between substantially 45 degrees to substantially 180 degrees (e.g., where substantially can refer to plus or minus 10 degrees), or between 70 degrees and 110 degrees. The predetermined angle can be 70 degrees, 80 degrees, 90 degrees, 100 degrees or 110 degrees or within plus or minus 10 degrees of the predetermined angle. 
     The fins  206  or  208  can include a material that allows the fins  206  or  208  to exert force without breaking. For example, the fins  206  or  208  can be made from fiberglass, ceramic, metal, iron, plastics, rubber, alloys, polymers, stone, cement, or gravel. The fins  206  can be made via an extrusion process. The fins  206  or  208  can be made from the same material or different materials. The fins  206  or  208  can have a predetermined stiffness or flexibility. For example, the stiffness of the fins  206  and  208  can refer to the extent to which the fins resist deformation in response to an applied force. The more flexible an object is, the less stiff the object is. The stiffness can refer to a measure of the resistance offered by an elastic body to deformation. The fins can deform along one or more degrees of freedom. The fins  206  and  208  can be flexible or rigid. For example, the fins  206  and  208  can be flexible enough such that they do not break under or otherwise compromise structural integrity of the fin, case  202  or cap  204  when under force. The fins  206  can have a high stiffness (e.g., 58 N/mm to 500 N/mm) medium stiffness (e.g., 40 N/mm to 58 N/mm) or low stiffness or be flexible (e.g., less than 40 N/mm). The stiffness of the fin  206  or  208  can vary from one end of the fin to another end of the fin. For example, an end of the fin  206  closer to the cap  204  or case  202  can have a greater stiffness as compared to an end of the fin  206  further from the cap  204  or case  202 . The stiffness of the fin from one end to the other end can be controlled based on types of material(s) used to make the fin, structural design of the fin, or tapering of the fin  206  or  208 . 
     The fins  206  or  208  can include any shape configured to exert a force including, e.g., a triangular shape, a rectangular shape, trapezoidal, trapezium, polygon shaped, circular, elliptical, or prism shaped. The fins can be tapered such that the fin can reduce in thickness or width towards one or more ends. For example, a first end of the fin  206  (e.g., a top end of the fin or an end of the fin closer to the tip of the cap) can have a greater width than a second of the fin (e.g., a bottom end of the fin adjacent to the case  202 ). For example, the first end of the fin  206  can have a width of 1 inch, 2 inch, 4 inches, 5 inches, 6 inches, 10 inches, 15 inches or other dimension to facilitate stabilizing the case or facilitate alignment. The second end of the fin  206  can have a same width as the first end, be wider than the first end, or be narrower than the first end. For example, the second end of the fin  206  can be 1 inch, 2 inch, 4 inches, 5 inches, 6 inches, 10 inches, 15 inches or other dimension to facilitate stabilizing the case or facilitate alignment. In some embodiments, the fins can extend 3 or 4 inches from the cylindrical portion of the case  202  and form a straight edge over the conical portion  204 . The straight edge can be used to form guidance, rotation control, or stabilization. The dimensions of the fins can be adjusted or modified based on dimensions of the case  202 , cap  204 , the speed at which the case  202  moves through water, weight of the case  202 , weight of the case  202  when loaded with objects, depth of the case  202  in the water column, or a size of a notch on a capture appliance or alignment mechanism. For example, one or more portions of the fin  206  can extend from the cap  202  up to 1.5 times the radius of the case  202  or cap  204 . In some embodiments, the width of the fin  206  can be mechanically adjusted (e.g., made narrower or wider). For example, the fin can be mechanically adjusted by folding or unfolding an extension portion, or sliding in or out an extension portion. 
     The one or more fins (e.g.,  206  or  208 ) can be connected to the case  202  or cap  204 . The case  202  or cap  204  and one or more fins can be separate components that are assembled together, connected, coupled, joined or otherwise affixed adjacent to one another. The one or more fins can be connected, coupled, joined or otherwise affixed to the case  202  or cap  204  in an irremovable manner or a removable manner. For example, the one or more fins can be fixed to the case  202  or cap  204  using one or more screws, bolts, nuts, latches, magnets, adhesives, solder, pins, clips, a tongue and groove joint, or a mechanical splice. In some embodiments, the one or more fins can be screwed onto the case  202  or cap  204 . The one or more fins can be fastened to the case  202  or cap  204 . 
     The system  200  can include one or more runners  230  and  232 . The runner can protrude from, and extending along, a longitudinal axis of the cylindrical portion of the case  202 . The cylindrical portion can refer to the portion of the case  202  between the cap  204  and the ballast  228 . The runner  230  or  232  can extend along the entire case  202  or a portion of the case  202  (e.g., 20% of the case, 30%, 50%, 70%, or 90%). The runner  230  or  232  can exert force to control rotation, dampen rotation, or manipulate or control a dynamic of the case. The runner  230  or  232  can further be configured to facilitate aligning an opening of the case with an external component, such as a conveyor. 
     The runner  230  or  232  can include one or more material of the fin  206  and be connected or coupled to the case  202 . The runner  230  can be formed as part of the case  202 , or coupled using one or more coupling technique. The runner  230  or  232  can be configured to facilitate alignment of the case  202 . The runner  230  and fin  206  can be coupled or connected to one another, be formed as a single component or structure, or be separate components. 
     Thus, in some embodiments, the system  200  may not include fins on the cap. The system  200  may not include a runner. The system  200  can include one of a fin or a runner. The system  200  can include both a fin and a runner. The system  200  can include one or more fins and one or more runners. In some embodiments, the system  200  may not control rotation of the case  202 , or may control rotation of the case using other mechanical, powered, or unpowered techniques or in-water motion control mechanisms. 
     The case  202  can include one or more openings  216  and  218 . The openings  216  and  218  can be configured to allow seismic data acquisition units, ocean bottom seismometers, geophones, nodes, devices or other matter to pass through the case  202 . Devices can enter the case  202 , be inserted, deposited, placed, or otherwise provided to an internal compartment of the case formed by the walls of the case  202  via the one or more openings. Devices can exit, leave, depart, eject, be retrieved, be received or otherwise provided external to the case via the one or more openings. In some embodiments, the case includes multiple openings  216  and  218 . For example, a first opening  216  can be closer to the cap  204 , as compared to the second opening  218 . For example, a first distance between  220  the first opening  216  and the cap  204  can be less than a second distance  220  between the second opening  218  and the cap  204 . The first distance  220  can be determined from a top of the first opening  216  and a bottom of the cap  204 . The first distance  220  can be determined from a middle or bottom of the first opening  216  and a middle or top of the cap  204 . The second distance  222  can be determined from a top of the second opening  218  and a bottom of the cap  204 . The second distance  222  can be determined from a middle or bottom of the second opening  218  and a middle or top of the cap  204 . Distances can be measured or determined using any units or measures of distance including, e.g., inches, feet, meters, centimeters, etc. The second opening  218  can be closer to the ballast  228  (e.g., second cap  228 ) as compared to the first opening  216 . For example, a distance between the first opening  216  and the ballast  228  can be greater than a distance between the second opening  218  and the ballast  228 . The first opening  216  can correspond to a top opening  216  when the case  202  is oriented in a substantially vertical manner (e.g., an angle between a vertical axis of the cylindrical case  202  and a horizontal plane is greater than 0 degrees and less than 180 degrees). The second opening  218  can correspond to a bottom opening  218  when the case  202  is oriented in the substantially vertical manner. In some embodiments, the opening  216  can correspond to the top opening  216  and the opening  218  can correspond to the bottom opening  218  regardless of the current physical orientation of the case  202 . 
     The one or more openings  216  and  218  can have the same dimensions, substantially similar dimensions, or different dimensions. The dimensions can be determined based on the dimensions of objects that are to be inserted or removed from the case via the openings  216  and  218 . For example, a case  202  configured to hold OBS units can be configured with openings that are based on the dimensions of the OBS units. The openings can be have a width or diameter of 4 to 50 inches, and height of 2 to 20 inches high. The shape of the openings  216  and  218  can include rectangular shaped, circular, elliptical, trapezoidal, rectangular with rounded corners, polygonal, or any other shape that facilitates allowing objects to pass through the case. 
     The openings  216  and  218  can be above one another such that a vertical or longitudinal axis passes through both openings  216  and  218 . The openings  216  and  218  can be on a same side of the case  202  or on different sides or portions of the case  202 . For example, opening  216  can be on a first side of case  202 , and opening  218  can be on a second side of the case  202  different from the first side. The openings  216  and  218  can be diagonal from one another such that a vertical or horizontal axis that passes opening  216  does not pass through opening  218 . 
     The system  200  can include one or more gates  224  or  226 . The gates  224  or  226  can cover, block or otherwise obstruct an opening of the case (e.g., obstructing the opening such that a device, object, or OBS node cannot pass through the opening). For example, a first gate  224  can cover or block opening  216 , and a second gate  226  can cover or block opening  218 . The gate  224  or  226  can be formed of any material to facilitate blocking or covering the opening. In some embodiments, the gate  224  or  226  can be formed of one or more materials capable of blocking or preventing device in the case from leaving the case  202 . For example, the gate  224  can be structurally strong enough to prevent an OBS unit from falling out of the case  202  while the case  202  is in motion, or prevent the OBS unit from sliding out from a conveyor within the case when the case  202  is stationary. The gate  224  or  226  can include a mesh gate, rope gate, metal gate, plastic gate, alloy gate, polymer-material based gate, wood gate, ceramic gate, fiberglass gate, or chain-link gate. 
     The gates  224  and  226  can be made of the same material or different materials. For example, gate  224  can be a weaker gate as compared to gate  226 . Gate  224  can have less structural integrity as compared to gate  226 . Gate  224  can be less stiff as compared to gate  226 . This may be because gate  226  can be configured to prevent OBS units from falling out of the bottom opening  218 . Thus, gate  226  can be strong enough to withstand the force exerted by several OBS units that are held in a gravity conveyor within the case  202 . Gate  224  may be weaker than gate  226  because gate  224  may not have to be configured to withstand the force exerted by several OBS unit because the OBS units may not be pushing up against gate  224 . 
     The gates  224  and  226  can open or close using one or more technique. The gates  224  or  226  can be a sliding gate (e.g., vertical, horizontal, diagonal or along another axis of the case  202  or cylindrical portion of the case  202 ), revolving gate, hinged gate, rotate gate, swing gate, sliding gate, barrier gate, or overhead gate. The system  200  can include one or more gate openers. The gate  224  can include a gate opener and the gate  226  can include a gate opener. The gate opener can include a mechanical device configured to open and close the gate, such as a hydraulic gate opener, electromechanical gate opener, or a gate opener that providers mechanical tension. For example, the gate can be under mechanical tension produced by a mechanical spring, coil, lever, compression spring, tension spring, flat spring, serpentine spring, cantilever spring, helical spring, leaf spring, or other elastic object that can store mechanical energy. 
     The gate  224  or  226  can include a locking mechanism, such as a latch, lever, pin, gravity latch, spring latch, turn latch, or slide bolts. For example, the locking mechanism can keep the gate in a closed position or closed state. The gate can be coupled to a spring that is stretched or under mechanical tension when the gate is closed. Releasing the locking mechanism can allow the spring to return to equilibrium from the tension or stretched state, thereby pulling open the gate. In some embodiments, the gate opener can powered and include a motor, rails, chains, and other devices to open and close the gate. 
       FIG. 2B  illustrates a side view of the system  200  for acquiring seismic data in accordance with an embodiment.  FIG. 2B  illustrates a perspective view of the case  200 , cap  204 , ballast  228 , first fin  206 , first runner  230 , opening  216 , and opening  218 . The width or diameter of the case  204  or ballast  228  is  250 . The diameter or width  250  can range, for example, from 3 feet to 8 feet. For example, the diameter can be 4 feet, 4.5 feet, 5 feet, 5.5 feet, or 6 feet. The ballast width can be the same or different from the width of the case  202  or the cap  204 . For example, the ballast width can be greater than the width of the case, less than the width of the case, or substantially similar to the width of the case (e.g., plus or minus 10% difference). The cap  204  width can be greater than the width of the case, less than the width of the case, or substantially similar to the width of the case (e.g., plus or minus 10% difference). 
     The height  236  of the system  200  can refer to the height from an external end of the ballast  228  to the external tip of the cap  204  when the cap  204  and the ballast  228  are attached or adjacent to the case  202 . The height  236  can range, for example, from 6 feet to 20 feet. For example, the height  236  can be 12 feet, 12.5 feet, 13 feet, 13.5 feet, 14 feet, 14.5 feet, or 15 feet. 
     The height  238  can correspond to the height of the case  202  without the cap  204  and the ballast  228 . The height  238  can range, for example, from 4 feet to 15 feet. The height  240  can correspond to the height of the cap  204 . The height  240  can range, for example, from 0.5 feet to 5 feet. The height  242  can correspond to the height of the ballast  224 . The height  242  can range, for example, from 0.5 feet to 5 feet. The height  244  can correspond to the height of one or more fins  206  or  208 . The fins can have the same height or be at different heights. The height  244  can range, for example, from 0.2 feet to 4 feet. The height  246  can correspond to the height of the one or more runners  230  and  232 . The runners can have the same height or different heights. The height  246  can range, for example, from 0.2 feet to 15 feet. The height  246  of the runner  230  can be less than or equal to the height  238  of the case  202 . The height  248  can correspond to the height from a bottom end of case  202  to the top of the fin  206 . The height  248  can range, for example, from 7 feet to 15 feet. The height  248  can be 10.5 feet. 
     The distance or height  220  can refer to the distance between the top opening  216  and the cap  206 . The distance or height H 9  can refer to the distance between the bottom opening  218  and the cap  206 . The distance  220  can be less than the distance H 9 . 
     The system  200  can include one or more beacons  234 . The beacon  234  can include or refer to a transponder. The beacon  234  can be positioned anywhere on the case that facilitates transmitting or receiving data. The beacon  234  can include a wireless transponder, such as an acoustic transponder, optical transmitter, light source, optical detector, optical receiver, magnetic transponder, or motion detector. In some embodiments, the beacon  234  can be positioned on a portion of the cap  204 . The beacon  234  can be positioned proximate to the first fin or the second fin. For example, the beacon  234  can be positioned adjacent to a fin  206  or fin  208  or within 1 foot of a portion of the fin  206  or fin  208 . The beacon  234  can be positioned between two fins  206  and  208 . The beacon  234  can be positioned above a fin  206  or  208  (e.g., on an end of the cap  204  that is further from the case  202 ). The beacon can be positioned below the fin  206  or  208  (e.g., on an end of the cap  204  that is closer to the case  202 ). The beacon  234  can be positioned on the case  202  or ballast  228 . For example, the beacon  234  can be positioned adjacent to an opening  216  or  218  or adjacent to a runner  230  or  243 . 
       FIG. 2C  illustrates a top view of the system  200  for acquiring seismic data in accordance with an embodiment. The top view of the system  200  illustrates a top perspective view of the cap  204 . The top perspective view illustrates the fin  206  and fin  208 . The fin  206  or  208  can have a thickness  256 . The thickness  256  can range, for example, from 0.5 inches to 4 inches. For example, the thickness can be 1 inch, 1.5 inches, or 2 inches. The thickness of a runner  230  or  232  can be the same thickness  256  or a different thickness. The runner  230  can be thicker than the fin, or thinner than the fin. At least a portion of the fins  206  or  208  can extend from the cap  204  by a length  254 . The length  254  can range, for example, from 0.5 inches to 1 foot. For example, the length  254  can be 1 inch, 2 inches, or 5 inches. The length  254  can correspond to the portion of the fin  206  or  208  that protrudes furthest from the cap  202 . The length  254  can correspond to the length a runner  230  or  232  protrudes from the case. The runner  230  or  232  can protrude more than a fin  206 , or less than a fin  208 . The angle  210  between the fins can range from 70 degrees to 180 degrees. The angle can be, for example, 85 degrees, 90 degrees, 95 degrees, 97 degrees, 100 degrees, 105 degrees or substantially one of these degrees (e.g., plus or minus 20 percent). The angle between the runners can be the same or substantially similar (e.g., plus or minus 20%) as the angle  210 , or different from the angle  210  (e.g., greater than plus or minus 20%). 
     The system  200  can include multiple beacons  234  or multiple transponders  234 . The beacons  234  (or transponders) can each be the same type of beacon, or different types of beacons. For example, a first beacon  234  can be an acoustic beacon, a second beacon  234  can include a light source, and a third beacon  234  can include a radio frequency transmitter. The distance between the beacons can correspond to  252 , which can range, for example, from 1 foot to 3 feet. For example, the distance between two beacons can be 2 feet. 
       FIG. 3  illustrates a conveyor provided for the system for acquiring seismic data, in accordance with an embodiment. The conveyor system  300  can include a conveyor  302  and support structure  226 . The conveyor  302  can be provided within case  202  as part of system  200  depicted in  FIG. 2A . For example, system  200  can include conveyor  302  and support structure  226 . The conveyor  302  can have, include, or constructed as a helix structure. The conveyor  302  can be provided within the case  202  to receive objects or devices (e.g., OBS units) unit at a first end  304  of the conveyer and transport the OBS unit via the helix structure  302  to a second end  306  of the conveyor to provide the OBS unit on the seabed to acquire the seismic data. A first distance  312  between the first end  304  of the conveyor  302  and the cap  204  can be less than a second distance  318  between the second end  306  of the conveyor and the cap  204 . The first end  306  of the conveyor can correspond to opening  216 , and the second end  304  of the conveyor  302  can correspond to opening  218 . For example, the opening  216  can be in alignment with the first end  306  of the conveyor such that when an object passes through the opening  216 , the object can come into contact or be positioned on or near the first end  216  of the conveyor. The conveyor  302  can hold 5 to 20 OBS nodes  30  or more. 
     The conveyor  302  can have a helix structure. A helix structure can refer to a type of smooth space curve that has a property that a tangent line at any point makes a constant, including substantially constant (e.g., plus or minus 10 degrees) angle with a fixed line corresponding to an axis. The helix structure can facilitate load balancing nodes around a center or center column of the case  202 . The helix structure can include a left-handed helix or a right-handed helix. The conveyor  302  can include helix structures such as coil springs, spiral slide, spiral ramps, or helicoid. The conveyor  302  can be a filled in helix or a helix coil. For example, the conveyor  302  can include one or more parallel rails forming a helix structure that guide OBS units from the first end to the second end. The conveyor  302  can include the helix structure with a center of the helix structure extending along an axis of the cylindrical portion of the case  202 . The axis of the cylindrical portion of case  202  can refer to a central axis of the cylinder that travels longitudinally or vertically through the cylinder  202  at a center point of the cylinder. 
     The conveyor  302  can have or be constructed with a constant spiral pitch (e.g., substantially constant spiral pitch that varies less than plus or minus 20%). The spiral pitch of the helix can correspond to the width of one complete helix turn, measured parallel to the axis of the helix. The conveyor  302  can have a spiral pitch in the range of, for example, 1 foot to 3 feet. For example, the spiral pitch can be 24 inches, or correspond to the distance  314 . In some embodiments, the distance  314 ,  316  and  310  can be the same or substantially similar (e.g., plus or minus 10%). In some embodiments, the distance  314 ,  316  and  310  can differ (e.g., vary greater than 10%). In some embodiments, the spiral pitch may be greater at the top of the conveyor or at the first end  304  to facilitate moving OBS units from the first end  304  towards the second end  306 ; and the spiral pitch may be less towards the second end  306 . In some embodiments, the spiral pitch may be greater at the second end  306  as compared to the first end  304  to facilitate removing OBS units from the second end  306 . 
     The conveyor  302  can be made from or composed of one or more materials that are suitable for use in an aqueous environment. For example, the conveyor  302  can include one or more of plastics, metals, fiberglass, PolyVinyl Chloride, steel, iron, composite materials, steel-reinforced cement, or aluminum. The material used to make the conveyor  302  can be selected based on a coefficient of friction of the material. For example, the conveyor  302  can include an unpowered gravity conveyor, such as a slide. The coefficient of friction of the conveyor  302  can allow OBS units to slide down the conveyor from the first end  304  to the second  306  without the use of power. 
     The conveyor  302  can include or be formed or constructed from a single portion or multiple portions. For example, the conveyor  302  can be made from multiple portions such as ⅕ turn portions, ¼ turn portions, ⅓ turn portions, ½ turn portions or full turn portions. For example, the conveyor  302  can be formed of 8 quarter turn portions to create a two full turn conveyor  302 . The multiple portions can be coupled, connected, affixed, or otherwise positioned adjacent to one another such at objects can pass from one portions to another portions. The multiple portions can be connected using adhesive, solder, molding, latches, screws, pins, tongue and groove joints, sockets or other coupling technique. The portions can be removable or irremovable coupled. 
     In some embodiments, the conveyor  302  can include rollers. The rollers can be mechanical rollers that are powered or unpowered. The rollers can facilitate moving, transporting or otherwise conveying OBS units or devices from the first end  304  towards the second end  306 . In some embodiments, the conveyor  302  can include a belt, pneumatic conveyor, vibrating conveyor, flexible conveyor, lubricated conveyor, gravity skatewheel conveyor, wire mesh conveyor, plastic belt conveyor, chain conveyor, electric track vehicle conveyor, spiral conveyor, screw conveyor, or a drag conveyor. For example, the conveyor  302  can be lubricated with oil or another lubricant that can reduce friction and allow devices to travel from the first end  304  to the second end  306 . In some embodiments, the conveyor  302  can include a belt that can be powered or driven to transport OBS units from the first end  304  to the second end  306 . In some embodiments, the conveyor  302  can be powered to transport units from the second end  306  to the first end  304 . 
     The system  200  can include a support structure  226 . The support structure  226  can be configured or constructed to support the conveyor  302 . In some embodiments, the support structure  226  includes a pole at a center of the helix structure. The pole  226  can be coupled, connected or otherwise attached to the conveyor  302  to support the conveyor at  308 , for example. For example, the pole  226  can include grooves in which a portion of the conveyor  302  can be inserted to couple or connect the conveyor  302  to the pole  226 . The pole  226  can be soldered to the conveyor  302 , or attached to the conveyor using adhesives or magnetism. An end of the pole  226  can be coupled, attached, or otherwise adjacent to a bottom of the case  202 , the ballast  228  or the cap  204 . 
     In some embodiments, the case  202  can provide the support structure  226  for the conveyor  302 . For example, an internal wall of the case  202  can include grooves in which a portion of the conveyor  302  can be inserted to provide support for the conveyor  302 . In some embodiments, the conveyor  302  can support itself. 
       FIG. 4A  is a system for acquiring seismic data in accordance with an embodiment. The system  400  can include one or more component, feature, material or function of system  200 . For example, the system  400  can include multiple conveyors, more than two openings, or a larger case. The system  400  includes a case  402  that can be similar to case  302 . The system  400  can include a cap  416  adjacent to an end of the case  402 . The cap  416  can be similar to cap  204 . The system  400  can include one or more runners  404  that can be similar to runner  230 . 
     The system  400  can include one or more conveyors. The one or more conveyors can overlap, be staggered, be subsequent to one another, be adjacent to one another or otherwise be positioned or configured within case  402 . For example, a first conveyor  502  and a second conveyor  504  can form a double helix structure. The conveyors  502  and  504  can be similar to, or include, or more component, feature, material or function as conveyor  302 . The first conveyor  502  and the second conveyor  504  can both be right-handed helixes, left-handed helixes, or one can be a left-handed helix structure while the other is a right handed helix structure. 
     The system can include one or more openings  406 ,  408 ,  410  and  412 . For example, a first opening  406  can correspond to a first end  418  of a first conveyor  502  provided within case  402 ; a second opening  410  can correspond to a second end  422  of the first conveyor  502  provided within the case  402 ; a third opening  408  can correspond to a first end  420  of a second conveyor  504  provided within the case  402 ; and a fourth opening  412  can correspond to a second end  424  of the second conveyor  504  provided within the case  402 . 
     In some embodiments, the openings  406 ,  408 ,  410 , and  412  can be vertically aligned. In some embodiments, the openings  406 ,  408 ,  410 , and  412  may not be vertically aligned on the surface of the case  402 . For example, the openings  406 ,  408 ,  410 , and  412  can be on different sides of the case, overlap, or be staggered. In some embodiments, opening  406  and  408  can be a single opening, or opening  410  and opening  412  can be a single opening. The openings can be at different circumferential positions (such as 0 degrees and 180 degrees). The opening  406  can be above opening  408 , or the opening  406  can be at the same level as opening  408 . For example, a distance between a bottom portion of opening  408  and the cap can be equal to a distance between a bottom portion of opening  406  and the cap. The opening  410  can be above opening  412 , or the opening  410  can be at the same level as opening  412 . For example, a distance between a bottom portion of opening  410  and the cap can be equal to a distance between a bottom portion of opening  412  and the cap. 
     In some embodiments, the system  400  may not include fins on the cap  416 . The system  400  may not include runner  404 . The system  400  can include one of a fin or a runner. The system can include both a fin and a runner. The system  400  can include one or more fins and one or more runners. 
       FIG. 4B  is a side perspective view of a system for acquiring seismic data, in accordance with an embodiment. The system  400  can have the following dimensions: a diameter or width  428  of the ballast  414  or case  402  can range, for example, from 3 feet to 6 feet. The diameter or width  428  can be 4 feet, 4.5 feet, or 5 feet, for example. The height  436  can correspond to the height of the system  400  with the cap  416 , case  402  and the ballast  414 . The height  436  can range from 10 feet to 20 feet, for example. The height  436  can be 12 feet, 13 feet, 14 feet, 15 feet, or 16 feet. The height  432  can correspond to a height of the runner  404 . The height  432  can range from 6 feet to 15 feet, for example. The height  432  can be 8 feet, 9 feet, or 10 feet, for example. The height  430  can correspond to a height of the ballast  414 , and can range, for example, from 1 foot to 4 feet. The height  430  can be 1 feet, 2 feet, or 3 feet, for example. The height H 13  can correspond to a height of the case  402 . The height H 13  can range from 6 feet to 15 feet, for example. The height H 13  can be 8 feet, 9 feet, or 10 feet, for example. The height  426  can correspond to the height of the cap  416 . The height  426  of the cap can range from 1 foot to 5 feet, for example. One or more dimensions of the system  400  can be greater than a corresponding dimension in system  200  because system  400  can include two or more conveyors provided within the case  402 , as compared to a single conveyor provided in case  202  of system  200 . The system  400  can include one or more fins and one or more beacons  234 . 
     A distance  434  between opening  406  and cap  416  can be less than a distance  438  between opening  408  and cap  416 . The distance  438  can be less than a distance  440  between opening  410  and the cap  416 . The distance  440  can be less than a distance  442  between the opening  412  and the cap  416 . In some embodiments, the distance  434  and the distance  438  can be the same. In some embodiments, distance  440  and  442  can be the same. 
       FIG. 4C  is a top perspective view of a system for acquiring seismic data, in accordance with an embodiment. As illustrated in the top view, a predetermined angle  450  between fins or runners can range, for example, from 50 degrees to 110 degrees. For example, the predetermined angle between the fins or runners can be 60 degrees, 70 degrees, 77 degrees, or 85 degrees. The predetermined angle  450  can be less than the predetermined angle  210  because system  400  may have a larger case which may have a larger cross-section area that produces greater drag force, and thus may generate drag force to dampen rotation with an angle  450  that is less than angle  210 . 
     The thickness  448  of a fin or runner can be the same or different from thickness  256 . For example, thickness  448  can be 2 inches, for example. The length  446  can correspond to the extent the fin or runner protrudes from cap  416  or case  402 , and can be the same or similar to length  254 . For example,  446  can be 3.5 inches. The length  444  can correspond to a length or distance between two beacons  234 . The length  444  can range from 0.5 feet to 2 feet or the diameter of the case  402 . For example, the length  444  can be 1 foot. 
       FIG. 5  illustrates multiple conveyors provided for the system for acquiring seismic data, in accordance with an embodiment. The conveyor system  500  can include a first conveyor  502 , a second conveyor  504 , and a support structure  506 . The conveyor system  500  can include more than two conveyors and up to, for example, 3, 4, 5, 6, or more conveyors. A first conveyor  502  and a second conveyor  504  can be provided within case  402 . The multiple conveyors  502  and  504  can include one or more component, function, feature of conveyor  302 . The conveyors  502  and  504  can have the same or similar dimensions as conveyor  302 , have larger dimensions or smaller dimensions. A support structure  506  can be provided within the case  402 . The support structure  506  can be the same as or include one or more function, material, or feature as support structure  226 . 
     The one or more conveyors  502  and  504  can have the same or similar spiral pitch. The spiral pitch can be similar to spiral pitch of conveyor  302 , or greater than the spiral pitch of conveyor  302 . For example, the spiral pitch of conveyors  502  and  504  can be 20 inches, 24 inches, 30 inches, 36 inches, 40 inches or greater. The spiral pitch of conveyor  502  can be D8. The spiral pitch of conveyor  504  can be  508 . The distance between conveyor  502  and  504  can be  510 . The distance between the conveyors  510  can be sufficient to allow an OBS node to pass through the conveyor. For example, the distance  510  can be greater than a height of the OBS node, such as 5 inches, 10 inches, 15 inches, or 24 inches. The distance  512  can refer to a distance between a first turn of conveyor  504  and a second turn of conveyor  502 , where conveyor  502  is a top conveyor and conveyor  504  is a bottom conveyor. The distance  512  can be greater than distance  510 . 
       FIG. 6A  illustrates a system to transfer units to or from a case in accordance with an embodiment. The system  600  can be configured or constructed to use a conveyor  616  to load OBS nodes  30  into a transfer system  200  via opening  216 , or remove or receive nodes  30  from transfer system  200  via a second opening  218 . The transfer system  200  can include or refer to system  200 ,  300 ,  400  or  500 . A crane  614  (e.g., crane  25 A) can support or hold transfer system  200  in a vertical position or substantially vertical position via coupling mechanism  622 . A receptacle or base  608  can support the transfer system  200 . The conveyor  616  can be positioned on an elevator  618  to raise or lower the conveyor  616  with an opening  216  or  218  of the transfer system  200 . In some embodiments, the system  600  can be used in a marine environment on a vessel  620 . 
     The crane  614  can be configured, calibrated and constructed to support transfer system  200 , raise transfer system  200 , lower transfer system  200  into an aqueous medium, and maintain the case in the aqueous medium. The crane  614  can include a winch configured to provide heave compensation. For example, the winch speed can range from 0 miles per hour (mph) to 7 mph. The heave compensation can range from 1 m/s 2  to 3 m/s 2 . In some embodiments, the winch speed can be 4.5 mph (such as approximately 4.5 mph with a variation of plus or minus 1 mph) and the heave compensation can be 1.8 m/s 2  (such as approximately 1.8 m/s 2  with a variation of plus or minus 0.5 m/s 2 ). 
     The crane  614  can be configured to carry a load of at least 1000 kg. The crane  614  can be configured to carry a payload of 1500 kg at 3000 meters. The crane  614  can include an electric motor, such as a 250 kW-440v/60 Hz motor. The crane  614  can be configured to lower the transfer system  200  to an ocean bottom, ocean seabed, or ocean floor. The crane  614  can be configured for mid-water docking between the transfer system  200  and an underwater vehicle. For example, a mid-water position in the water column can include or refer to a location 50 to 1000 meters above a seabed, and can vary based on a flatness of the seabed so as not to damage the case  202 . The crane  614  can provide heave compensation to facilitate the mid-water docking. 
     The crane  614  can include a coupling mechanism  622  configured and constructed to hold a portion of the transfer system  200 . The coupling mechanism  622  can include a suction mechanism, alignment notches, or a cable connected to the transfer system  200  and the crane  614 . 
     The transfer system  200  can include one or more component, feature, function or material of system  200  or system  400 , including, for example, case  202 , cap  204 , ballast  228 , one or more conveyors  302 , support structure  226 , one or more fins  206  and  208 , or one or more runners  230  and  232 . The transfer system  200  can include a case  202  (e.g., case  202  or  402 ) with one or more openings  216  or  218 . A cap  204  can be adjacent to the case  202 . The transfer system  200  can include one or more first conveyors (e.g., conveyor  302 ,  502 , or  504 ) provided within the case  202 . The transfer system  200  can include one or more fins  206  and one or more runners. 
     The system  600  can include one or more second conveyors  616  external to the case  202 . The second or external conveyors  616  can be configured and constructed to deposit or transfer nodes into case  202 , or receive or retrieve nodes from case  202 . The external conveyor  616  can include rollers, a belt, pneumatic conveyor, vibrating conveyor, flexible conveyor, lubricated conveyor, gravity skatewheel conveyor, wire mesh conveyor, plastic belt conveyor, chain conveyor, electric track vehicle conveyor, spiral conveyor, screw conveyor, or a drag conveyor. The external conveyor  616  can open or close a gate (e.g., gates  224  or  226 ) that close or obstruct an opening  216  or  218 . For example, the external conveyor  616  can include an arm or lever configured to open or activate the gate on the case  202 . The external conveyor  616  can open the gate to load or unload nodes  30 , and close the gate after loading or unloading the nodes  30 . 
     The conveyor  616  can include or be placed on an elevator  618 . The elevator  618  can be configured to raise or lower the external conveyor  616  to align an end of the external conveyor  616  with opening  216  or  218 . The external conveyor  616  aligned with an opening of the case  202  can turn on, drive, or otherwise initiate conveyance to load or unload units  30  into or out of the case  202 . For example, the elevator  618  configured to position the second conveyor to align the second conveyor with the first opening. The elevator  618  can include a traction elevator, hydraulic elevator, lift, mechanical lift, electromechanical lift, hydraulic lift, or manual lift. For example, the lift can include a jack or mechanical jack configured with a screw thread for lifting the conveyor  616 . 
     The conveyor  616  can raise or lower to align with multiple openings of the case  202  to load nodes  30  into the case  202 . For example, the transfer system  200  can include multiple conveyors in a double helix structure. The external conveyor  616  can align with a first opening corresponding to a first internal conveyor provided within the case  202 , and transfer a first set of nodes onto the first internal conveyor. The external conveyor  616  can then align with a second opening corresponding to a second internal conveyor provided within the case  202 , and transfer a second set of nodes onto the second internal conveyor. The external conveyor  616  can be a powered conveyor. The internal conveyors can be unpowered. 
     The system  600  can include a base  608 . The base  608  can include a support arm  624 . The support arm  624  can at least partially wrap around the case  202  to support the case  202  in a substantially vertical position (e.g., plus or minus 20 degrees from vertical). The base  608  and support arm  624  can be used to support the transfer system  200  on the vessel  620 . In some embodiments, the base  608  or support arm  624  can support the transfer system  200  on a seabed. For example, the case  202 , or bottom cap or ballast of the transfer system  200  can be at least partially inserted into the base  608 , coupled to base  608 , attached to base  608 , or otherwise removably or irremovably connected to base  608 . The crane  614  can lower the transfer system  200  along with base  608  and support arm  624  to through the aqueous medium to the seabed, and place the base  608  in contact with the seabed such that the base  608  is attached, in contact with, placed on or otherwise connected to the seabed. The base  608  can be configured to support the transfer system  200  in a substantially vertical manner on the seabed. 
       FIG. 6B  illustrates a system to transfer units to or from a case in accordance with an embodiment. The system  601  illustrates the elevator  618  raising the external conveyor  616  to align an end of the external conveyor  616  with an opening  216  of the case  202 . The external conveyor  616  can be operational to transfer, move, or otherwise provide one or more nodes  30  to the internal conveyor within the case  202 . In this example, the elevator  618  includes a mechanical jack elevator  618 . 
       FIG. 7  illustrates a system to transfer units to or from a seabed in accordance with an embodiment. The system  700  can include one or more system, component, element, feature or function of  FIGS. 1-6B . The system  700  can include the transfer system  200  coupled to a crane  614  via a coupling mechanism  622  and a cable  702 . The cable  702  can include any type of cable capable of supporting or carrying transfer system  200  when the transfer system is loaded with one or more nodes  30 . For example, cable  702  can include or correspond to cable  46 A or cable  44 A. The cable  702  can be coupled to the crane  614  (e.g., winch) and the transfer system  200  (e.g., via a cap of the transfer system  200 ). The crane can be configured to raise, lower, or support the case via the cable. For example, the crane  614  can include a winch conferred to roll out the cable  702  to lower the transfer system  200  into an aqueous medium, lower the transfer system  200  onto a seabed, lower the transfer system  200  into a water column, maintain the transfer system  200  at a level in the aqueous medium that is below the surface of the water and above the seabed. 
     The crane  614  can lower the transfer system  200  into the aqueous system such that the fins  206  of the transfer system  200  create force as the transfer system  200  moves through the aqueous medium to dampen rotation of the case. For example, the crane  200  can orient the transfer system  200  in the aqueous medium such that the fins  206  extend in a direction opposite the direction of motion. The vessel  620  can move in a first direction, while crane  614  can tow the transfer system  200  behind the vessel  620 . The fins  206  can face a second direction that is opposite the first direction in which the vessel moves. In some embodiments, the crane  614  lowers the transfer system  200  into the aqueous medium, and the transfer system  200  automatically orients itself such that the fins  206  extend in the second direction. For example, the fins  206  can create a drag force that control rotation of the transfer system  200  to rotate the transfer system  200  to a predetermined orientation relative to motion of the vessel  620 , and then dampen, minimize, or stabilize rotation such that the transfer system  200  maintains the predetermined orientation relative to motion of the vessel  620 . 
       FIG. 8A  illustrates a skid system to acquire seismic data from a seabed in accordance with an embodiment. The system  800  can include a frame  802  or housing  802  containing a conveyor  804  that supports or holds one or more nodes  30 . The system can include a storage compartment  40 . The system  800  can include a capture appliance  820  configured, constructed and operational to capture or hold a case (e.g., case  202  or  402 ) or transfer system (e.g.,  200 ,  400 , or  200 ) that can store one or more nodes  30 . The capture appliance  820  can include one or more arms  806 , one or more notches  808 , one or more pin holes  810 , and an actuator  812  that can open or close the one or more arms  806 . The system  800  can include a ramp  816  that can deploy the nodes  30  on the seabed or otherwise connect or place the nodes  30  on the seabed. The system  800  can include a gate  818  that can obstruct or prevent the nodes  30  from inadvertently being deployed onto the seabed. One or more component, function or feature of system  800  can be operated autonomously or manually by an operator. For example, an operator on vessel  820  can communicate with a component of system  800  and instruct system  800  to perform a function. 
     The system  800  can include a frame  802 , housing  802  or skid structure  802 . The housing  802  can include a frame  802  or skid structure  802 . The housing  802  or skid structure  802  can support or elevate the conveyor  804 , for example, on or above the seabed. The housing  802  can be designed and constructed to be in contact with the seabed. The housing  802  can include a frame structure, solid structure, or porous structure. In some embodiments, the housing  802  can include a continuous, solid housing. The housing  802  can include one or more materials that are similar or different to the materials used in the case. The materials can include, e.g., plastics, metals, alloys, lead, iron, or cement. In some embodiments, the housing  802  can be ballasted or weighted. The housing  802  can contain nodes  30  such that the nodes  30  can enter and exit the housing through an opening at an end of conveyor  804 . 
     The system can include a conveyor  804  that supports or holds one or more nodes  30 . The conveyor  804  can be provided within housing  802 . The housing  802  can hold or support conveyor  804 . The conveyor  804  can be mechanically coupled to the housing  802 , or be in contact with the housing  802 . The conveyor  804  can include a powered conveyor. The conveyor  804  can include rollers, a belt, pneumatic conveyor, vibrating conveyor, flexible conveyor, lubricated conveyor, gravity skatewheel conveyor, wire mesh conveyor, plastic belt conveyor, chain conveyor, electric track vehicle conveyor, spiral conveyor, screw conveyor, or a drag conveyor. The conveyor  804  can include a first end  822  and a second end  824 . The first end  822  can be closer to the capture appliance  820  than the second end  824 . The second end  824  can be closer to the ramp  816  than the first end  822 . The first end  822  and second end  824  can be on opposite ends of the conveyor  804 . The first end  822  can receive nodes  30  from a case held by capture appliance  820 . The first end  822  can provide nodes to the case held by the capture appliance  820 . The second end  824  can provide nodes to the ramp  816  for deployment on the seabed. The second end  824  can receive nodes from the seabed. The conveyor  804  can be operated in a forward motion or a reverse motion to direct nodes  30  towards the first end  822  or towards the second end  824 . 
     The system  800  can include a capture appliance  820  configured, constructed and operational to capture or hold a case (e.g., case  202  or  402 ) or transfer system (e.g.,  200 ,  400 , or  200 ) that can store one or more nodes  30 . The capture appliance  820  can include one or more arms  806 , one or more notches  808 , one or more pin holes  810 , and an actuator  812  that can open or close the one or more arms  806 . The actuator  812  can open the arms  806  such that the case  202  can be released from the capture appliance  820 . Opening the arms  806  can include or refer disengaging the arms  806 , disengaging the case  202 , releasing the arms, releasing the case  202 , separating the arms  806 , or removing the arms  806  from the case  202 . For example, the actuator  812  can open the arms fully or 100% or partially (e.g., 80%, 70%, 60%, 50%, 30%, 10%). The actuator  812  can close the arms  806  to capture or hold the case  202 . Closing the arms  806  can include or refer to engaging the arms  806 , engaging the case  202 , grasping the arms  806 , grasping the case  202 , putting the arms  806  in a holding position, capturing the case  202 , or moving the arms  806  into a position to hold the case  202 . For example, the actuator  812  can fully close the arms  806  (e.g., 100% closed) or partially close the arms (e.g., 80%, 70%, 60%, 50%, 30%, 10%). The one or more arms  806  can include radial arms, robotic arms, circular arms, a lever, or a clamp. The arms  806  can include or be made from, for example, one or materials used to make the case  202 , or one or more different materials. 
     In some embodiments, the capture appliance  820  includes a single arm  806  that can extend around a case holding nodes  30  and hold the case. In some embodiments, the capture appliance  820  includes two arms  806  that each partially extend around the case in order to securely hold the case. Securely holding the case can include holding the case in a relatively fixed position such that an opening of the case is in alignment with conveyor  804  and nodes can either be loaded or unloaded to or from the conveyor  804  and the case. 
     The capture appliance  820  can include an actuator  812  that can open or close the one or more arms  806 . The actuator  812  can include a hydraulic actuator, pneumatic actuator, electric actuator, or mechanical actuator. The actuator  812  can be coupled to a lever, pulley system or hinge that can move the one or more arms  806  from an open position to a closed position. In some embodiments, the actuator  812  can include a spring mechanism that defaults to an open position. By having a mechanical tension system that defaults to an open position, should there be an error or failure in system  800  (e.g., due to power failure, communication failure, component failure), the arms will return to the default position of open, and the case can be released from the arms  806  and allowed to return to the vessel  820 . For example, responsive to power failure, locking pins on the capture appliance or arms can spring back and the case  202  can be pulled by the crane up and out of the closed arms for separation. 
     The capture appliance  820  can open or close both arms  806  at the same time, at substantially the same time or at different times. The capture appliance  820  can include a single actuator that controls both arms  806  so their open or close state is synchronized. The capture appliance  820  can include a first actuator for the first arm, and a second actuator for the second arm. The first and second actuators can be operated or controlled to synchronize the opening or closing of the arms. Upon closing the arms, the capture appliance  820  can engage a locking mechanism such as pins or a latch to keep the arms in a closed position around the case  202 . 
     The capture appliance  820  can include an alignment mechanism  808 . The alignment mechanism  808  can hold or direct the case to a predetermined orientation, such as an orientation in which an opening of the case is in alignment (e.g., substantial alignment) with the first end  822  of the conveyor in order to load or unload nodes  30  to or from the case from or to the conveyor. The alignment mechanism  808  can include, for example, one or more notches, fins, runners, protrusions, knobs, stoppers, detents, or buttons. The alignment mechanism  808  can be mechanical, powered, or unpowered. For example, the alignment mechanism  808  can be gravity-driven. 
     In some embodiments, the alignment mechanism  808  includes one or more notches  808 . The notches  808  can be used to align an opening of a case with a first end  822  of the conveyor  822 . For example, the notches  808  can receive a protrusion from a case. The protrusion can be positioned on the case such that when the protrusion is in alignment with the notch  808 , an opening of the case is in alignment with the first end of the conveyor  822 . The notch  808  can include an indent, inversion, or a concave portion. The notch  808  can include a tapered notch, circular notch, hemispherical notch, rectangular notch, triangular notch, trapezoidal notch or a stepped notch. For example, a tapered notch can be wider at the entrance of the notch and narrower at an in internal portion of the notch. In some embodiments, the alignment mechanism  808  can include the protrusion on the capture appliance  820 , while the notch is on the case. 
     The alignment mechanism  808  can include a single notch  808  or multiple notches  808 . The alignment mechanism  808  can include acoustic receivers, optical detectors, light sensors, transmitters, or other transducers that can receive or transmit signals from or to the case to identify a location or orientation of the case. 
     In some embodiments, the alignment mechanism  808  can include a first retaining ring on the case  202 . The ring can be installed at a downward angle that points to an opening of the case opening. The capture appliance can include a second angled ring configured to mate with the first angled ring on the case. The first and second rings can be configured and angled such that gravity can facilitate aligning a bottom point of the case with the receiving end of the capture appliance or conveyor external to the case. For example, a base of the case can have a conical shape with the titled ring or a ball-bearing raceway encircling the case. The conical or cone base can be lowered into the capture appliance. As the conical base slides into the second ring of the capture appliance, the base can engage with the capture appliance and orient by gravity. For example, the base can be ballasted such that the weight at a lower edge of a tilted ring can cause the case to orient and come into alignment. 
     In some embodiments, the alignment mechanism  808  can include an actuator or motor to move the ring to align an opening with the conveyor. The ring can move via ball-bearings, rollers, gears, a belt or chain. In some embodiments, the alignment mechanism  808  can include rotating the case until it locks into alignment via a protrusion, latch, clamp or other stopper. In some embodiments, the alignment mechanism  808  can include a carousel that rotates the case into alignment, where alignment can include or refer to aligning an opening of the case with a conveyor external to the case. 
     The capture appliance  820  can include one or more pin holes  810 . The pin holes  810  can receive pins or protrusions from the case when the capture appliance  820  holds the case. The pin holes  810  can capture or hold the case in a stable manner such that the case does not substantially move (e.g., plus or minus 1″ vertical, horizontal or rotational movement). 
     The system  800  can include a deployment appliance  816 , such as a ramp  816  that can deploy the nodes  30  on the seabed or otherwise connect or place the nodes  30  on the seabed. The ramp  816  can be positioned at the second end of the conveyor. In some embodiments, the ramp  816  can be an unpowered gravity ramp, and the conveyor  824  can directed OBS nodes  30  towards the ramp  816  so the nodes slide down the ramp and contact the seabed. The length of the ramp  816  can range from 1 foot to 10 feet. The angle of decent of the ramp  816  can range from 30 degrees to 70 degrees. 
     The system  800  can include one or more deployment appliances  816  or different types of deployment appliances  816 . For example, the deployment appliance  816  can include a staircase, an escalator, curved slide, robotic arm, conveyor, pulley system, or an arm with a suction cup to place nodes  30  on the seabed. 
     The system  800  can include a first gate  814  at the first end of the conveyor, and a second gate  818  at the second end of the conveyor. The gates  814  and  818  can obstruct or prevent the nodes  30  from inadvertently being deployed onto the seabed or falling into a case. The gates  814  and  818  can be similar to, or include one or more component or feature of, a gate on the case such as gate  224 . The gate  818  can vertically move up or down to open and close. The gates  814  and  818  can swing open and closed along a rotation point of the gate  814  and  818 . The gates  814  and  818  can open sideways. The gates  814  and  818  can include or be operated by a gate opener, such as an electric gate opener, mechanical gate opener, hydraulic gate opener, or pneumatic gate opener. The gate  814  at the first end  822  of the conveyor  804  can be configured, constructed and operational to open a gate of the case captured by the capture appliance  820 . 
       FIG. 8B  illustrates a different perspective view of the skid system  800  to acquire seismic data from a seabed in accordance with an embodiment. In this perspective view, the capture appliance  820  and arms  806  thereof are in the open positioned. In some embodiments, the open position can correspond to the default position. The first gate  814  can be in the closed position to obstruct or prevent nodes  30  from falling or passing through or past the first end  822  of the conveyor  804 . 
       FIG. 8C  illustrates the skid system  800  to acquire seismic data from a seabed in accordance with an embodiment. The skid or frame  802  can have a width  852  in the range of 4 feet to 8 feet, for example. For example, the skid  802  can have a width  852  of 4 feet, 5 feet, 6 feet, 7 feet, or 8 feet. The skid structure  802  can have a height  856  in the range of 1.5 feet to 4 feet, for example. The height  856  of the skid structure can be set based on a height of the nodes  30 , a number of levels of conveyors or nodes contained in the skid structure  802 , or the distance above the seabed the skid  802  is to support the conveyor. The height  856  can include, for example, 2 feet, 2.5 feet, 3 feet, or 4 feet. The skid structure  802  can have a length  858  in the range of 5 feet to 15 feet, for example. The length  858  of the skid structure can include, for example, 6 feet, 7 feet, 9.5 feet, 10 feet, or 11 feet. The length  858  of the skid structure can be set based on a number of nodes  30  to be supported on the conveyor  804 . For example, the length  858  of the skid structure can be set to accommodate three nodes, four nodes, five nodes, 6 nodes, 7, nodes, or 10 nodes. The conveyor  804  can have a length  860  in the range of 7 feet to 15 feet, for example. The length  860  of the conveyor can be less than, the same as, or greater than the length  858  of the skid structure. For example, the length  860  of the skid structure can be 13 feet 10 inches, while the length  858  of the skid structure can be 9 feet 8 inches. The conveyor  804  can, thus, extend beyond the skid structure at the first end  822  to facilitate receiving nodes  30  from a case held by the capture appliance  820 . 
     The deployment appliance  816  can have a width  854  in the range of 1 foot to 3 feet, for example. The width of the deployment appliance  816  can be set based on a width of the nodes  30  or other devices deployed via the deployment appliance  816 . For example, the width  854  can be 2 feet, 2.5 feet, or 3 feet. 
       FIGS. 9-13  illustrate a system to acquire seismic data from a seabed.  FIGS. 9-13  illustrate a system including a vehicle and case, where the vehicle is configured to capture the case and release the case. System  900  can include a vehicle  902 . The vehicle  902  can include, for example, a remotely operated vehicle, autonomously operated vehicle, robot, manually operated vehicle, machine, or submarine. The vehicle  902  can include one or more engine  906 , such as a propeller, thruster, motor, or other mechanism to navigate through the aqueous medium (e.g., move up, down, left, right, diagonally, or rotate about an axis of the vehicle  902 ). 
     The vehicle  902  can include the skid system  800  depicted in  FIG. 8A . The skid system  800  can be coupled or connected to a portion of the vehicle  902 . In some embodiments, the skid system  800  can be adjacent to a portion of the vehicle  902 . In some embodiments, the skid system  800  can be contained within the vehicle  902 . The skid system  800  can be removably or irremovably connected to the vehicle  902 . The vehicle  902  and the skid system  800  can be communicatively connected. For example, the vehicle  902  can have access to power. The vehicle  902  can have battery power or receive power via a cable (e.g., from vessel  820 ). The vehicle  902  can receive communication and control information from the cable (e.g., remotely operated). The vehicle  902  can be autonomous (e.g., preprogrammed to perform one or more functions based on one or more parameters, conditions or events). The vehicle  902  can be communicatively connected with the skid system  800  to control one or more component, element of function of the skid system  800  (e.g., actuate arms, gates, conveyor, or ramp). 
     The vehicle  902  can include one or more sensors  904 . The sensor  904  can include an acoustic sensor, optical sensor, transponder, transducer, receptor, detector, camera, proximity sensor, motion sensor, temperature sensor, ambient light sensor, or any other sensor that can detect a parameter or environment condition. The sensor  904  can be configured to identify a case or transfer system  200 . For example, the case can include a beacon that emits an acoustic signal. The sensor  904  can track the acoustic signal and move towards the acoustic signal. The acoustic signal can include an acoustic signature, chirp rate, frequency, or other pattern that facilitates the vehicle  902  identifying, tracing, and locating the source of the acoustic signal (e.g., the transfer system  200 ). 
     The sensor  904  can include one or more sensors of different resolution. For example, a first sensor  904  can have a coarse resolution and a second sensor  904  can have greater resolution to fine tune the location. For example, the sensor  904  can detect an acoustic ping to perform a coarse location determination. The ping can be transmitted by the transfer system (e.g., beacon  234 ) and received by sensor  904 . The ping can indicate a position of the underwater vehicle  902  relative to the transfer system  200 . The vehicle  902  can use the ping to determine a depth of the vehicle  902  relative to the transfer system  200  or case  202 . For example, the sensor  904  can include multiple sensors positioned throughout the vehicle  902  and oriented in different angles. If a sensor  904  located or oriented to receive pings from above the vehicle receives the ping, then the vehicle  902  can determine that the transfer system  200  is above the vehicle  902 . If a sensor  904  located or oriented to receive pings from below the vehicle receives the ping, then the vehicle can determine that the transfer system is below the vehicle  902 . The sensor  904  or vehicle  902  can include one or more processors to perform signal processing techniques to determine the direction of the source of the ping. The sensor  904  can include a camera to identify the transfer system  200  and align a conveyor of the skid system  800  with an opening of the transfer system  200 . 
     Upon locating the transfer system  200 , the vehicle  902  can position the capture appliance  820  above the transfer system  200 . The capture appliance  820  can be in an open position. The vehicle  902  can position the capture appliance  820  around the cable  702  such that the cable is substantially (e.g., within 20%) centered in the capture appliance  820 . The vehicle  902  can use one or more sensors or controllers to align the capture appliance  820  above the transfer system  200  and around the cable  702 . 
       FIG. 10  illustrates the system  900  to acquire seismic data from a seabed. The vehicle  902  can close the capture appliance  820  and move down towards the transfer system  200  (e.g., system  200  or  400 ). The vehicle  902  can use the one or more sensors  904  to monitor the status of the operation or the orientation of the transfer system  200  relative to the capture appliance  820  or component thereof. If the vehicle  902  determines than the transfer system  200  is not properly oriented relative to the capture appliance  820 , the vehicle  902  can use the engine  906  to rotate or move along an axis to orient the capture appliance with the transfer system  200 . For example, the vehicle  902  can use the alignment mechanism  806  to align the capture appliance with the transfer system  200 . 
     In some embodiments, the vehicle  902  can include an alignment control system that receives sensor data and automatically aligns the capture appliance with the transfer system. In some embodiments, the vehicle  902  can receive communication signals from a remote operator to rotate or move. The fins  206  or  208  of transfer system  200  can enter into notches  806  of the alignment mechanism. This can facilitate locking, fixing, or stabilizing the orientation of the transfer system  200  relative to the capture appliance  820 . Once the fins  206  or  208  are in the notches  806 , the vehicle  902  can continue to move down (e.g., via the runners  230  and  232 ) to align the skid system  800  with an opening of the transfer system (e.g., first opening  216  or second opening  218 ). 
       FIG. 11  illustrates the system  900  to acquire seismic data from a seabed. The vehicle  902 , upon rotational alignment via the alignment mechanism  806 , fins  206 , and runner  230 , can vertically align the first end  822  of the conveyor  804  with an opening  216  of the transfer system  200 . The vehicle  902  can align the conveyor  804  with the top opening  216  to load OBS units  30  into the case. The vehicle  902  can use gate  818  of the skid system  800  to open a gate  224  of the transfer system  200 . The vehicle  902  can initiate the conveyor  804  of the skid system to drive or direct OBS nodes towards the first opening  216  and onto the first end  212  of conveyor  302 . The capture appliance  820  can hold the transfer system  200  in place during loading of the OBS units  30  into the transfer system  200 . 
     The vehicle  902  can align the conveyor  804  with the bottom opening  218  to receive OBS units  30  from the case, as shown in  FIGS. 14 and 15 . The vehicle  902  can use gate  818  of the skid system  800  to open a gate  226  of the transfer system  200 . The vehicle  902  can initiate the conveyor  804  of the skid system to receive or retrieve OBS nodes from the second end  214  of conveyor  302  via second opening  218  and onto the first end  822  of conveyor  804 . The conveyor  804  can direct the OBS nodes  30  towards the second end  824  of the conveyor  804 . The capture appliance  820  can hold the transfer system  200  in place during retrieval of the OBS units  30  from the transfer system  200 . 
       FIG. 12  illustrates the system  900  to acquire seismic data from a seabed. The vehicle  902  can release the transfer system  200 . The vehicle  902  can release the transfer system  200  and move away from the transfer system  200 . The vehicle  902  can move above and away from the transfer system  200 , down and away from the transfer system  200 , or horizontally away from the transfer system  200 . In some embodiments, the vehicle  902  can release the transfer system  200  responsive to a failure condition, error, power failure, component failure, or other condition or event that triggers a release procedure of the capture appliance  820  or default position of the capture appliance  820 . 
       FIG. 13  illustrates the system  900  to acquire seismic data from a seabed. The capture appliance  820  can be in an open position or default position where the arms  806  are locked or maintained in an open position. The arms  806  can be temporarily connected to a portion of the conveyor  804  or frame  802  via a latch or other connecting mechanism. The transfer system  200  can be retrieved by raised by crane  614  to the vessel  620 , and unloaded via conveyor  616  and elevator  618  to retrieve seismic data recorded on the OBS nodes  30 . 
       FIG. 14  illustrates the system  900  to acquire seismic data from a seabed. The vehicle  902  can retrieve nodes from a bottom opening of the transfer system  200  at a location in the water column or on the seabed. For example, the transfer system  200  (e.g., or  400 ) can be lowered by crane  614  to the seabed. The vehicle  902  can approach the transfer system  200 , align the capture appliance with the transfer system, and lower itself to come into contact with the seabed such that the fins  206  align and enter the notches  806 . The skid system  800  can then open a gate  226  on the transfer system  200 , and initiate conveyor  804  to retrieve nodes  30  from the transfer system  200 . 
       FIG. 15  illustrates the system  900  to acquire seismic data from a seabed. The conveyor  804  can retrieve nodes  30  from the transfer system  200 . In some embodiments, open opening gate  226 , the nodes  30  may slide down and out of the case  202  due to gravity and the helix structure provided within the case  202 . The vehicle  902  can include a retrieval mechanism (e.g., similar to deployment appliance  816 ) to retrieve OBS units  30  from the seabed. The OBS units  30  can store, in memory, seismic data acquired from the seabed. The retrieval mechanism  816  can include one or more arms, robotic arms, suction cups, or ramps to retrieve the OBS unit from the seabed and position the OBS unit  30  onto the conveyor  804 . In some embodiments, the retrieval mechanism may be a separate ROV or AUV configured to retrieve OBS units  30  and place them on conveyor  804 . 
       FIG. 16  illustrates a flow diagram for a method of acquiring seismic data from a seabed. The method  1600  can include identifying a transfer system at act  1602 . At act  1604 , the method  1600  includes positioning a capture appliance above the transfer system. At act  1606 , the method  1600  includes closing the capture system. At act  1608 , the method  1600  includes moving the capture appliance towards a bottom portion of the transfer system. At act  1610 , the method  1600  includes receiving an OBS unit from the transfer system. At act  1612 , the method  1600  includes placing the OBS unit on the seabed to acquire seismic data. 
     The method  1600  can include identifying a transfer system at act  1602 . For example, a sensor of an underwater vehicle such as an ROV or AUV can receive or detect a ping from a beacon of a transfer system. The sensor can convert the received ping (e.g., acoustic or optic) to an electrical signal, and transmit the electrical signal to a processor or communication device of the vehicle. The transfer system broadcasting the ping or beacon can include a case constructed to store one or more OBS units. The underwater vehicle can include a conveyor and an arm to capture and hold the case, and retrieve OBS nodes from the case. 
     At act  1604 , the method  1600  includes positioning a capture appliance above the transfer system. The sensor of the vehicle can detect the ping from the beacon or transponder on the case, and use the ping to position the arm in the open state above the case. For example, the sensor can include multiple sensors used to triangulate the location of the beacon on the case broadcasting the ping. In some embodiments, the vehicle (or processor or controller thereof) can determine a depth of the underwater vehicle relative to the case based on the ping. For example, the vehicle can locate the beacon in three dimensions X, Y, and Z coordinates relative to the vehicle. The vehicle can determine an angular direction of the beacon based on the received ping. 
     Upon locating the case, the vehicle can move the capture appliance including the arm above a cap of the case. The vehicle can move the arm in the open state towards a cable connected to the cap of the case that supports the case in an aqueous medium. The capture appliance can be in an open state and at least partially surround the cable extending from the cap of the case to a crane on a vessel. The case can include a first portion that is hydrodynamic and a second portion configured to produce drag to prevent rotation of the case through an aqueous medium. The case can include a portion having a conical shape or a domed shape. 
     At act  1606 , the method  1600  includes closing the capture system. For example, an actuator of the vehicle can close the arm or one or more arms to capture or hold the case in a relatively stable position. 
     At act  1608 , the method  1600  includes moving the capture appliance towards a bottom portion of the transfer system. The vehicle can move the capture appliance to lock, in a notch of the arm, a runner or fin of the case to align the opening of the case with the conveyor. In some embodiments, the terms runner and fin can be used interchangeably. The bottom portion of the case can be below the cap. For example, the bottom portion of the case can refer to a top opening of the case used to load OBS units into the case, or a bottom opening of the case used to retrieve OBS units. The vehicle can align an opening of the case with a conveyor of the underwater vehicle. The vehicle can open a gate on the case that blocks the OBS unit from moving through the opening of the case. Blocking the OBS unit from moving through the opening can include or refer to restraining the OBS within the case, stopping the OBS from passing through the case, confining the OBS unit to the case, or obstructing the passage of the OBS unit. 
     At act  1610 , the method  1600  includes receiving an OBS unit from the transfer system. The conveyor of the vehicle can receive, via the opening of the case, the OBS unit stored in the case or transported via the case. For example, the vehicle can run or turn on the conveyor to retrieve the OBS unit from the case. 
     The case can include a helix structure provided within the case that stores one or more OBS units. In some embodiments, the case can include multiple helix structures provided within the case to store multiple levels of OBS units. The OBS units can travel down the helix structure (e.g., via gravity or other means). As the vehicle retrieves OBS units, additional OBS units can travel down the helix structure behind the retrieved OBS units. For example, when the vehicle retrieves or removes a first OBS unit from the helix structure, second OBS unit behind the first OBS unit can also be retrieved in a train-like fashion, even though the OBS units are not connected or coupled to one another. Subsequent OBS units can travel down through the helix structure as each OBS unit is retrieved from the case. For example, a last OBS unit in the case can push the OBS unit in front of the last OBS unit. However, when there is only one remaining OBS unit, the conveyor of the vehicle can pull the last OBS unit out of the case because the last unit is not being pushed out by anything on the unpowered, gravity conveyor of the case. 
     At act  1612 , the method  1600  includes placing the OBS unit on the seabed to acquire seismic data. The underwater vehicle can place the OBS unit on the seabed to acquire seismic data from the seabed. The underwater vehicle can initiate recording of the OBS unit responsive to or upon placing the OBS unit on the seabed. The OBS unit can be configured to record upon being loaded into the case on the vessel. The OBS unit can automatically begin recording upon detecting that it is placed on the seabed. The OBS unit can automatically begin recording upon detecting a condition or event, such as a temporal trigger, depth trigger, pressure trigger, temperature trigger, optical signal, or acoustic signal. 
       FIG. 17  is a block diagram of a computer system  1700  in accordance with an embodiment. The computer system or computing device  1700  can be used to implement one or more controller, sensor, interface or remote control of system  100 , system  200 , system  300 , system  400 , system  500 , system  600 , system  700 , system  800 , or system  900  or method  1600 . The computing system  1700  includes a bus  1705  or other communication component for communicating information and a processor  1710   a - n  or processing circuit coupled to the bus  1705  for processing information. The computing system  1700  can also include one or more processors  1710  or processing circuits coupled to the bus for processing information. The computing system  1700  also includes main memory  1715 , such as a random access memory (RAM) or other dynamic storage device, coupled to the bus  1705  for storing information, and instructions to be executed by the processor  1710 . Main memory  1715  can also be used for storing seismic data, binning function data, images, reports, tuning parameters, executable code, temporary variables, or other intermediate information during execution of instructions by the processor  1710 . The computing system  1700  may further include a read only memory (ROM)  1720  or other static storage device coupled to the bus  1705  for storing static information and instructions for the processor  1710 . A storage device  1725 , such as a solid state device, magnetic disk or optical disk, is coupled to the bus  1705  for persistently storing information and instructions. 
     The computing system  1700  may be coupled via the bus  1705  to a display  1735  or display device, such as a liquid crystal display, or active matrix display, for displaying information to a user. An input device  1730 , such as a keyboard including alphanumeric and other keys, may be coupled to the bus  1705  for communicating information and command selections to the processor  1710 . The input device  1730  can include a touch screen display  1735 . The input device  1730  can also include a cursor control, such as a mouse, a trackball, or cursor direction keys, for communicating direction information and command selections to the processor  1710  and for controlling cursor movement on the display  1735 . 
     The processes, systems and methods described herein can be implemented by the computing system  1700  in response to the processor  1710  executing an arrangement of instructions contained in main memory  1715 . Such instructions can be read into main memory  1715  from another computer-readable medium, such as the storage device  1725 . Execution of the arrangement of instructions contained in main memory  1715  causes the computing system  1700  to perform the illustrative processes described herein. One or more processors in a multi-processing arrangement may also be employed to execute the instructions contained in main memory  1715 . In some embodiments, hard-wired circuitry may be used in place of or in combination with software instructions to effect illustrative implementations. Thus, embodiments are not limited to any specific combination of hardware circuitry and software. 
     Although an example computing system has been described in  FIG. 17 , embodiments of the subject matter and the functional operations described in this specification can be implemented in other types of digital electronic circuitry, or in computer software, firmware, or hardware, including the structures disclosed in this specification and their structural equivalents, or in combinations of one or more of them. 
     Embodiments of the subject matter and the operations described in this specification can be implemented in digital electronic circuitry, or in computer software, firmware, or hardware, including the structures disclosed in this specification and their structural equivalents, or in combinations of one or more of them. The subject matter described in this specification can be implemented as one or more computer programs, e.g., one or more circuits of computer program instructions, encoded on one or more computer storage media for execution by, or to control the operation of, data processing apparatus. Alternatively or in addition, the program instructions can be encoded on an artificially generated propagated signal, e.g., a machine-generated electrical, optical, or electromagnetic signal that is generated to encode information for transmission to suitable receiver apparatus for execution by a data processing apparatus. A computer storage medium can be, or be included in, a computer-readable storage device, a computer-readable storage substrate, a random or serial access memory array or device, or a combination of one or more of them. Moreover, while a computer storage medium is not a propagated signal, a computer storage medium can be a source or destination of computer program instructions encoded in an artificially generated propagated signal. The computer storage medium can also be, or be included in, one or more separate components or media (e.g., multiple CDs, disks, or other storage devices). 
     The operations described in this specification can be performed by a data processing apparatus on data stored on one or more computer-readable storage devices or received from other sources. The term “data processing apparatus” or “computing device” encompasses various apparatuses, devices, and machines for processing data, including by way of example a programmable processor, a computer, a system on a chip, or multiple ones, or combinations of the foregoing. The apparatus can include special purpose logic circuitry, e.g., an FPGA (field programmable gate array) or an ASIC (application specific integrated circuit). The apparatus can also include, in addition to hardware, code that creates an execution environment for the computer program in question, e.g., code that constitutes processor firmware, a protocol stack, a database management system, an operating system, a cross-platform runtime environment, a virtual machine, or a combination of one or more of them. The apparatus and execution environment can realize various different computing model infrastructures, such as web services, distributed computing and grid computing infrastructures. 
     A computer program (also known as a program, software, software application, script, or code) can be written in any form of programming language, including compiled or interpreted languages, declarative or procedural languages, and it can be deployed in any form, including as a stand-alone program or as a circuit, component, subroutine, object, or other unit suitable for use in a computing environment. A computer program may, but need not, correspond to a file in a file system. A program can be stored in a portion of a file that holds other programs or data (e.g., one or more scripts stored in a markup language document), in a single file dedicated to the program in question, or in multiple coordinated files (e.g., files that store one or more circuits, subprograms, or portions of code). A computer program can be deployed to be executed on one computer or on multiple computers that are located at one site or distributed across multiple sites and interconnected by a communication network. 
     Processors suitable for the execution of a computer program include, by way of example, both general and special purpose microprocessors, and any one or more processors of any kind of digital computer. Generally, a processor will receive instructions and data from a read only memory or a random access memory or both. The essential elements of a computer are a processor for performing actions in accordance with instructions and one or more memory devices for storing instructions and data. Generally, a computer will also include, or be operatively coupled to receive data from or transfer data to, or both, one or more mass storage devices for storing data, e.g., magnetic, magneto optical disks, or optical disks. However, a computer need not have such devices. Moreover, a computer can be embedded in another device, e.g., a personal digital assistant (PDA), a Global Positioning System (GPS) receiver, or a portable storage device (e.g., a universal serial bus (USB) flash drive), to name just a few. Devices suitable for storing computer program instructions and data include all forms of non-volatile memory, media and memory devices, including by way of example semiconductor memory devices, e.g., EPROM, EEPROM, and flash memory devices; magnetic disks, e.g., internal hard disks or removable disks; magneto optical disks; and CD ROM and DVD-ROM disks. The processor and the memory can be supplemented by, or incorporated in, special purpose logic circuitry. 
     To provide for interaction with a user, implementations of the subject matter described in this specification can be implemented on a computer having a display device, e.g., a CRT (cathode ray tube) or LCD (liquid crystal display) monitor, for displaying information to the user and a keyboard and a pointing device, e.g., a mouse or a trackball, by which the user can provide input to the computer. Other kinds of devices can be used to provide for interaction with a user as well; for example, feedback provided to the user can be any form of sensory feedback, e.g., visual feedback, auditory feedback, or tactile feedback; and input from the user can be received in any form, including acoustic, speech, or tactile input. 
     While various inventive embodiments have been described and illustrated herein, those of ordinary skill in the art will readily envision a variety of other means or structures for performing the function or obtaining the results or one or more of the advantages described herein, and each of such variations or modifications is deemed to be within the scope of the inventive embodiments described herein. More generally, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that all parameters, dimensions, materials, and configurations described herein are meant to be exemplary and that the actual parameters, dimensions, materials, or configurations will depend upon the specific application or applications for which the inventive teachings are used. The foregoing embodiments are presented by way of example, and within the scope of the appended claims and equivalents thereto other embodiments may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described and claimed. The systems and methods described herein are directed to each individual feature, system, article, material, or kit, described herein. In addition, any combination of two or more such features, systems, articles, materials, kits, or methods, if such features, systems, articles, materials, kits, or methods are not mutually inconsistent, is included within the inventive scope of the present disclosure. 
     The above-described embodiments can be implemented in any of numerous ways. For example, the embodiments may be implemented using hardware, software or a combination thereof. When implemented in software, the software code can be executed on any suitable processor or collection of processors, whether provided in a single computer or distributed among multiple computers. 
     Also, a computer may have one or more input and output devices. These devices can be used, among other things, to present a user interface. Examples of output devices that can be used to provide a user interface include printers or display screens for visual presentation of output and speakers or other sound generating devices for audible presentation of output. Examples of input devices that can be used for a user interface include keyboards, and pointing devices, such as mice, touch pads, and digitizing tablets. As another example, a computer may receive input information through speech recognition or in other audible format. 
     Such computers may be interconnected by one or more networks in any suitable form, including a local area network or a wide area network, such as an enterprise network, and intelligent network (IN) or the Internet. Such networks may be based on any suitable technology and may operate according to any suitable protocol and may include wireless networks, wired networks or fiber optic networks. 
     A computer employed to implement at least a portion of the functionality described herein may comprise a memory, one or more processing units (also referred to herein simply as “processors”), one or more communication interfaces, one or more display units, and one or more user input devices. The memory may comprise any computer-readable media, and may store computer instructions (also referred to herein as “processor-executable instructions”) for implementing the various functionalities described herein. The processing unit(s) may be used to execute the instructions. The communication interface(s) may be coupled to a wired or wireless network, bus, or other communication means and may therefore allow the computer to transmit communications to or receive communications from other devices. The display unit(s) may be provided, for example, to allow a user to view various information in connection with execution of the instructions. The user input device(s) may be provided, for example, to allow the user to make manual adjustments, make selections, enter data or various other information, or interact in any of a variety of manners with the processor during execution of the instructions. 
     The various methods or processes outlined herein may be coded as software that is executable on one or more processors that employ any one of a variety of operating systems or platforms. Additionally, such software may be written using any of a number of suitable programming languages or programming or scripting tools, and also may be compiled as executable machine language code or intermediate code that is executed on a framework or virtual machine. 
     In this respect, various inventive concepts may be embodied as a computer readable storage medium (or multiple computer readable storage media) (e.g., a computer memory, one or more floppy discs, compact discs, optical discs, magnetic tapes, flash memories, circuit configurations in Field Programmable Gate Arrays or other semiconductor devices, or other non-transitory medium or tangible computer storage medium) encoded with one or more programs that, when executed on one or more computers or other processors, perform methods that implement the various embodiments of the solution discussed above. The computer readable medium or media can be transportable, such that the program or programs stored thereon can be loaded onto one or more different computers or other processors to implement various aspects of the present solution as discussed above. 
     The terms “program” or “software” are used herein in a generic sense to refer to any type of computer code or set of computer-executable instructions that can be employed to program a computer or other processor to implement various aspects of embodiments as discussed above. Additionally, it should be appreciated that according to one aspect, one or more computer programs that when executed perform methods of the present solution need not reside on a single computer or processor, but may be distributed in a modular fashion amongst a number of different computers or processors to implement various aspects of the present solution. 
     Computer-executable instructions may be in many forms, such as program modules, executed by one or more computers or other devices. Generally, program modules include routines, programs, objects, components, data structures, or other components that perform particular tasks or implement particular abstract data types. Typically the functionality of the program modules may be combined or distributed as desired in various embodiments. 
     Also, data structures may be stored in computer-readable media in any suitable form. For simplicity of illustration, data structures may be shown to have fields that are related through location in the data structure. Such relationships may likewise be achieved by assigning storage for the fields with locations in a computer-readable medium that convey relationship between the fields. However, any suitable mechanism may be used to establish a relationship between information in fields of a data structure, including through the use of pointers, tags or other mechanisms that establish relationship between data elements. 
     Also, various inventive concepts may be embodied as one or more methods, of which an example has been provided. The acts performed as part of the method may be ordered in any suitable way. Accordingly, embodiments may be constructed in which acts are performed in an order different than illustrated, which may include performing some acts simultaneously, even though shown as sequential acts in illustrative embodiments. 
     The indefinite articles “a” and “an,” as used herein in the specification and in the claims, unless clearly indicated to the contrary, should be understood to mean “at least one.” References to “or” may be construed as inclusive so that any terms described using “or” may indicate any of a single, more than one, and all of the described terms. 
     As used herein in the specification and in the claims, the phrase “at least one,” in reference to a list of one or more elements, should be understood to mean at least one element selected from any one or more of the elements in the list of elements, but not necessarily including at least one of each and every element specifically listed within the list of elements and not excluding any combinations of elements in the list of elements. This definition also allows that elements may optionally be present other than the elements specifically identified within the list of elements to which the phrase “at least one” refers, whether related or unrelated to those elements specifically identified. Thus, as a non-limiting example, “at least one of A and B” (or, equivalently, “at least one of A or B,”) can refer, in one embodiment, to at least one, optionally including more than one, A, with no B present (and optionally including elements other than B); in another embodiment, to at least one, optionally including more than one, B, with no A present (and optionally including elements other than A); in yet another embodiment, to at least one, optionally including more than one, A, and at least one, optionally including more than one, B (and optionally including other elements); etc. 
     In the claims, as well as in the specification above, all transitional phrases such as “comprising,” “including,” “carrying,” “having,” “containing,” “involving,” “holding,” “composed of,” and the like are to be understood to be open-ended, i.e., to mean including but not limited to. Only the transitional phrases “consisting of” and “consisting essentially of” shall be closed or semi-closed transitional phrases, respectively.