Meteor was commissioned as a military ship with the
Reichsmarine but spent most of her life in a scientific role.
Scientific work Meteor entered service in November 1924 and made her maiden survey expedition between 20 January and 17 February 1925 with the main purpose to check the equipment. In the course of this survey work
Meteor found a bank (
seamount) that rises to below sea level from a depth of . This bank was named
"Meteor Bank" (). Between 1929 and 1935
Meteor made several journeys to Iceland and Greenland, where she performed survey work as well as fishery protection duties. A
North Atlantic Expedition was performed in 1937/38 in order to take cross sections of the
North Atlantic that complemented the earlier survey work done in the South Atlantic. During the
Gulf Stream Expedition from 1938 a plateau rising to below surface from a sea depth of more than 4,000 m was discovered. In order to distinguish it from the smaller bank found in the South Atlantic, this bank was named
"Great Meteor Bank" and is today known as
Great Meteor Seamount ().
Second World War With the outbreak of the
Second World War the ship was removed from service on 8 September 1939. Reactivated in 1940
Meteor was used as a
tender in the
Baltic Sea as well along the
Norwegian Coast. With the end of the war, the ship was laid up in
Kiel.
Soviet service In November 1945 the ship was handed over to the Soviet Union, but briefly returned into German service for a few months in 1946 to perform survey work under Soviet supervision. Eventually she became the Soviet survey vessel
Ekvator. Her final fate is unclear, she was either scrapped in 1968 or survived some more years as a
barracks ship. == Heritage ==