Feeds Uncategorized admin October 26, 2023 Garbage Patches: How Gyres Take Our Trash Out to Sea How the gyres that circulate our ocean waters also accumulate plastics. Find out what a garbage patch is and isn’t, and what we can do about this ocean-sized problem. Episode permanent link and show notes Post Views: 62 Related posts: What is longitude? What is the intertidal zone? What is a glass sponge? What is eutrophication? What are the oldest living animals in the world? Why do scientists measure sea surface temperature? What is ocean etiquette? What is the Forchhammer’s Principle? What is HAZMAT? Capturing Snapshots of the U.S. Population Connecting the Dots with Modeling (Part Two) Breaking Down Barriers: Natural Infrastructure Navigating the Sea is Safer, More Efficient With Digital Charts Dealing with Dead Zones: Hypoxia in the Ocean Marine Life Counts: The U.S. Marine Biodiversity Observation Network The Exxon Valdez, 25 Years Later Hypoxia Research points to unprecedented and worrying rise in sea levels (Phys.Org) 3-D printed coral could help endangered reefs-provide a structural starter kit for reef organisms (ScienceDaily) NOAA Ship Rainier Successfully Field Tests Autonomous Hydrographic Survey Launch (NOAA) Rebounding Populations and New Flexibility Boost Catches by West Coast Groundfish Fleet (ENN.com) Dolphins have best friends but also shun those outside their clique (NewScientist) Mystery of Mercury Levels in Arctic Animals Gets Solved (LiveScience) Clues At Fish Auction Reveal Several New Species Of Opah. (ENN.com) Bad news: Carbon Emissions Have Suddenly Started Rising Again (NewScientist) A new pace for molecular clocks PERBAS: In search of safe carbon dioxide storage in offshore basalt rocks Hot on the trail of the causes of rapid ice sheet instabilities in climate history Learning and researching on the high seas Hej från Åland
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