Feeds Uncategorized admin October 26, 2023 Motion in the Ocean: Tides and Currents Understanding how the ocean moves is no easy task. In this episode, we hear from a NOAA oceanographer who studies the physics of how the ocean moves to better understand and predict how tides and currents shape our coastal environment. Episode permanent link and show notes Post Views: 51 Related posts: What is a tide pool? How do hurricanes affect sea life? What is a ghost forest? What causes a sea turtle to be born male or female? What is coral spawning? How does climate change affect coral reefs? What is marine biogeography? What is a wetland? Equity and Justice in Coastal Planning Restoration: Replacing What Was Lost From Diving to Data: Close-up with Coral Research Meteotsunamis: State of the Science Garbage Patches: How Gyres Take Our Trash Out to Sea Picking the Right Spot: Offshore Wind Energy Great Pacific Garbage Patch Coastal Blue Carbon Coral Bleaching United States and United Kingdom join to protect the RMS Titanic’s final resting place (NOAA) Humpback whales use their flippers to swat salmon into their mouths (NewScientist) Origin of massive methane reservoir identified provides evidence of formation and abundance of abiotic methane (PHYS.org) NOAA & Air Force Reserve ‘Hurricane Hunters’ to visit East Coast on preparedness tour May 6-10 (NOAA) There Are ‘Superbug’ Genes in the Arctic. They Definitely Shouldn’t Be There. (LiveScience) A surfer who survived a great white shark attack plans to keep the tooth that lodged into his battered board (UnderwaterTimes) NOAA updates Texas rainfall frequency values (NOAA) Study finds microplastics in stomachs of 73 percent of mesopelagic fish caught in Northwest Atlantic (ScienceDaily) Mojib Latif awarded the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany The geochemical fingerprints of hotspot volcanism Winter storms over Labrador Sea influence Gulf Stream system Acting now – to protect the ocean, biodiversity and our climate Science Day 2023: Ocean Voices is more than writing blogs!
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