听写填空,只写填空内容,不抄全文,5-10句,不用写标号,注意标点,口语中因结巴等问题造成的重复单词只写一遍~

Hints:
North Atlantic
European
Gulf Stream
torpedo-like


In September 2008, scientists launched a team of undersea robot gliders to learn about changes in ocean currents.

David Smeed: [---1---]

You're listening to oceanographer David Smeed of the National Oceanography Center in England. [---2---]

David Smeed: [---3,4---](从That's开始写)

[---5,6---]

David Smeed: [---7---]

[---8---] The gliders will help scientist find out if that's true.

I'm Jorge Salazar, from ES, a clear voice for science.
We're at Es. Org.

【视听版科学小组荣誉出品】
We've been trying out the gliders as a part of a monitoring program in the North Atlantic that's aiming to monitor the overturning circulation of the Atlantic. The gliders are monitoring a system of currents, known as the 'Atlantic heat conveyor' which influences European climate. That's the part of the ocean circulation that transports heat polewards from equatorial regions. So in particular think of the Gulf Stream bringing warm water, which has an important influence on the climate of continents at high latitudes. Scientists have relied on moored instruments, from which provide data only about once a year. But the torpedo-like gliders can roam and report on the sea for up to 100 days and deliver speedy information on the ocean currents. They come up to the surface each day and communicate with us by satellite. Climate change models have predicted that these ocean currents are slowing.