Sentences with phrase «ocean life include»

Other features of the midrange HTC Ocean Life include Bluetooth 5.0, HTC Usonic and Sense 9.0 on top of the stock Android OS.
You cans see all sorts of ocean life including; black and white tip reef sharks, bump head parrotfish, frog fish, nudibranches, cuttlefish, stingrays, Pygmy sea horses, hundreds of turtles, eels all your regular reef fish and so much more.

Not exact matches

The photos include close - ups of the gaseous giant, its famous rings, and its enigmatic moons — including Titan, which has its own atmosphere, and icy Enceladus, which has a subsurface ocean that could conceivably harbor microbial life.
There is no way in Hell (which there is one) you can convince any logical thinking person (myself included) that my ancestors crawled out of the ocean and somehow magically grew arms and legs from nothing and decided to live on land just «because».
4c) let there be LIGHT (1 - 4 all the first day) 5c) God next creates the heavens (what we call the sky) above (2nd day) 6c) dry land appears as the oceans form (3rd day) 7c) green plant life appears on land (3rd day also) 8c) the cloud cover left over from the billions of years of rain finally condenses enough that a visible moon and sun can be seen from the earth's surface through the clouds (4th day) 9c) God creates sea life including fish and birds (5th day) 10c) God creates cattle and beasts (large land animals)(6th day) 11c) God creates man.
Family owned and styled after the traditional New England grand seaside resorts, the Winnetu includes 58 suites, studios and private cottages, each equipped with air - conditioning, kitchenettes and separate living areas, many of which have unobstructed ocean views.
Some of my favorite things in life include sunsets, the smell of the ocean, laughing until it hurts, and pineapple.
The pollution in our ocean, rivers, and lakes threatens nearly every species of aquatic life, including sharks.
We still know little about how plastic affects ocean life but there is growing evidence that it is harmful to many creatures — including us.
And the problem is not confined to land but echoes across the seas as well, where human - produced noise interferes with the lives of various ocean dwellers, including whales.
Of nearly 300 living animal and protist species documented on the debris, which crossed the Pacific Ocean following Japan's destructive 2011 tsunami, researchers analyzed in detail 237 species, which include larger invertebrates and two fish.
This includes places like parts of the eastern Pacific Ocean where small animals like nematodes and specially adapted fish live on the fringes of habitability, subsisting in waters where oxygen concentrations can be only about 1 % of normal surface water levels.
In a second piece, Wise explained how a marine ecologist is using robots (with casings made from surplus fire extinguishers) to mimic the motions of microscopic marine life, including crab larvae, as they move through ocean waters during their development into adult organisms.
«New deep reef ocean zone, the rariphotic, teeming with new fish species: New zone comprises reef fishes — including numerous new species — That live well below shallow coral reefs.»
This variability includes the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), a long - lived El Niño - like pattern of Pacific climate variability that works like a switch every 30 years or so between two different circulation patterns in the North Pacific Ocean.
The lingering questions include how the radioactivity might contaminate ocean life that humans eat
If the sun dimmed significantly today, the oceans would gradually freeze solid, and most multicellular life on Earth — humans included — would probably go extinct.
Scientists are keeping a close watch on variables that might affect life in the open ocean, including depleted oxygen levels caused by a feeding frenzy from oil - and gas - eating microbes, and the unknown effects of dispersants, which break the oil into droplets but may keep it suspended in the water.
Organisms, including the single - celled bacteria living in the ocean at that early date, need a steady supply of phosphorus, but «it's very hard to account for this phosphorus unless it is eroding from the continents,» says Aaron Satkoski, a scientist in the geoscience department at the University of Wisconsin - Madison.
The microbial communities in these sediments include aggregates of methane - oxidizing archaea called ANME (for ANaerobic MEthanotrophs) and sulfate - reducing bacteria (SRB) that live together symbiotically and help to remove some 80 percent of the methane released from ocean sediments.
River herring include two related species, alewife and blueback herring, which migrate between freshwater spawning grounds and the ocean, where they spend most of their lives.
In a new study recently published in the journal Global Biogeochemical Cycles, scientists of Kiel University (CAU) with colleagues from GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel and international partners from the USA, New Zealand, and Great Britain studied marine benthic shell - forming organisms around the world in relation to the chemical conditions they currently experience — with a surprising result: 24 percent, almost a quarter of the analyzed species, including sea urchins, sea stars, coralline algae or snails, already live in seawater unfavorable to the maintenance of their calcareous skeletons and shells (a condition referred to as CaCO3 - undersaturation).
Infectious agents from terrestrial animals, including domestic cats, livestock and even humans are spreading to the oceans and threatening our sea life.
Earlier this year, researchers discovered that periods when the ocean had high levels of trace elements — like zinc, copper, manganese and selenium — seemed to overlap with periods of high productivity, including the Cambrian explosion, when most groups of living animals first appeared.
Grassle thought it was a splendid idea, as long as it didn't get diverted into something strictly utilitarian — a census of seafood — and as long as it included all the other things that lived in the ocean, including obscure but biologically important organisms like polychaetes.
Across the world's oceans, seas and coasts, tens of millions of tonnes of it are released by microbes that live near plankton and marine plants, including seaweeds and some salt - marsh grasses.
«While Venus is known as our «sister planet,» we have much to learn, including whether it may have once had oceans and harbored life,» Jim Green, director of NASA's Planetary Science Division, said in the statement.
He found many varieties of eubacteria species, including some that usually prefer soil or ocean living — all living inside rock salt.
A vast number of animals, including fish, shrimp and squid, live in the ocean's mesopelagic zone — the waters 200 to 1000 meters (660 to 3300 feet) below the surface.
Earlier models had assumed that only 1 to 2 per cent of the iron contained in aerosols, including shipping emissions, is soluble in seawater, so the remaining 98 to 99 percent would sink to the bottom without affecting ocean life.
To take a peak at this microscopic life in its natural habitat, a team of scientists including Hans Røy, a microbiologist at Aarhus University in Denmark, traveled to the tropical waters of the Pacific Ocean.
Microorganisms dominate all other life everywhere scientists have looked, including the human body, the Earth's soils and sediments, the oceans and fresh waterways, the atmosphere and even extreme environments such as hydrothermal vents and subglacial lakes.
Scientific programs include: human genomic sequencing and analysis, synthetic genomics and exploration of new vaccines using this technology, and environmental and single cell genomics to explore the vast unseen world of microbes living in the human body, the ocean, soil and air.
The JCVI teams are focused on a variety of genomic research areas including continued work in synthetic biology; sampling and analysis of the world's oceans, fresh water and soils to better understand the microbes living in these environments; and new analysis on the human genome in the hopes of discovering new insights into disease prevention and treatment.
His research interests include ocean ambient noise and sound field characterization, and underwater noise impacts to marine life.
Antje Boetius and her team are renowned for their contributions to the diversity and function of life associated with seafloor processes, including pelagobenthic coupling, gas seepage and fluid flow, and the structure, function and dynamics of microbial communities of the ocean floor.
In a single year, microorganisms, including many living in the ocean and decaying swamps, form and consume at least a billion tons of methane.
The CAESAR sample will reveal how these materials contributed to the early Earth, including the origins of the Earth's oceans, and of life.
Men and women in their 90's were seen leading normal active lives, including daily swimming in the ocean and even horseback riding.
Barkin has had an illustrious acting career comprised of more than 50 filmes, including Sam Levinson's Sundance winner ANOTHER HAPPY DAY; Cam Archer's SHIT YEAR; Steven Soderbergh's Ocean's 13; Todd Solondz's PALINDROMES; Antoine Fuqua's BROOKLYN»S FINEST; THIS BOY»S LIFE opposite De Niro and Leonardo DiCaprio; Spike Lee's SHE HATE ME; Tony Scott's THE FAN opposite De Niro; Walter Hill's JOHNNY HANDSOME; WILD BILL opposite Jeff Bridges; and SEA OF LOVE opposite Al Pacino.
Richard Attenborough: an escaped lunatic in A Bridge Too Far (1977) John Carpenter: his longest cameo appearance was as Bennett in The Fog (1980) Terry Gilliam: directed himself in bit roles in Jabberwocky (1977), Brazil (1985), and The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1988); he also directed himself as a member of the Monty Python troupe in Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975), and The Meaning of Life (1983) Ron Howard: small cameo roles in Night Shift (1982), How the Grinch Stole Christmas (2000), and A Beautiful Mind (2001) Lawrence Kasdan: Devo's (River Phoenix) lawyer in I Love You To Death (1990) Elia Kazan: Mortuary Assistant in Panic in the Streets (1950) Stephen King: in his lone directorial effort Maximum Overdrive (1986) Spike Lee: cameos (and some larger roles) in many of his own films, including: She's Got ta Have It (1986), School Daze (1988), Do the Right Thing (1989), Mo» Better Blues (1990), Jungle Fever (1991), Malcolm X (1992), Crooklyn (1994), Clockers (1995), Girl 6 (1996), Summer of Sam (1999), and 3 A.M. (2001) Terrence Malick: an unexpected visitor at door, with blueprints, in Badlands (1973)- credited as «Caller at Rich Man's House» Robert Redford: the Narrator in A River Runs Through It (1992) Rob Reiner: a helicopter pilot in Misery (1990) M. Night Shyamalan: Dr. Hill at the hospital in The Sixth Sense (1999), a Stadium drug dealer in Unbreakable (2000), deadly driver Ray Reddy in Signs (2002), and Guard at Desk in The Village (2004) Steven Soderbergh: small cameo roles in Schizopolis (1996), Ocean's Eleven (2001) Oliver Stone: an officer with a phone in his hand in a US base's bunker when it is blown up by a suicide bomber in Platoon (1986)
Andy Garcia (Ocean's Thirteen) and Julianna Margulies (Snakes on a Plane) create one of the most credible long - time - married couples cinema has seen in ages, but the entire cast — including Emily Mortimer (Redbelt), Alan Arkin (Marley & Me), Steven Strait (Stop - Loss), and Garcia's real - life daughter, Dominik García - Lorido — couldn't be more faultless.
Some 16 years after the original series made such a dramatic splash, Blue Planet II, narrated by the 90 - year - old broadcaster, is airing seven episodes, including incredible bioluminescent sea creatures, which glow in the dark at the bottom of the deepest oceans — similar to the incredible flashlight fish and illuminating jellyfish at SEA LIFE Blackpool.
I tried to include sea life that swims and also sea life that you would find along the sand in these templates, so that the finished effect would be a bulletin board display with sea life swimming in the water and sea life along the sand on the bottom of the ocean.
In addition to the 10 reading fish above, this Dive Into Reading Book Reports set includes a variety of 40 other fish and ocean sea life.
Other features for the Cybook Ocean include a built in frontlight, up to 10 weeks of battery life, it comes with 4 GB of internal memory, and supports microSD cards for further expansion.
VICTOR OCEAN FISH formula with Wild Alaskan Salmon uses fish as the primary protein source, providing an excellent balance of amino acids as well as high levels of the much desired Omega 3 fatty acid.This is an excellent choice for animals that may have allergies to certain ingredients including; Poultry, Meat, Corn, Wheat or Gluten as it is free from all of those ingredients.The 25 % Protein I 12 % Fat combination provides ample nutrition to meet the requirements for All Life Stages.
The color overtones are reds and greens and the tropical feel is unmistakable.The living room has been extended to include the screened lanai, but the windows may be opened to enjoy the ocean breezes and salt air.
The main house features four bedrooms, including a master suite with a king - sized bed, ensuite bathroom with jetted tub and large shower, adjacent living area, skylights, balcony and ocean view.
- Water sports including - Water polo, water aerobics, ocean kayaking, paddle boating, boogie boarding and windsurfing - Daily scheduled yoga classes (60 min)- A range of lifestyle classes such as cooking and painting (60 min)- Evening entertainment including live music and traditional dance - Games lounge with billiards, table tennis, air hockey, video games - Full access to the fitness centre - Themed buffet dinners with a cultural show - Selection of welcome drinks, fruit basket, cold towel, hotel souvenir, private check - in and welcome briefing - Wide selection of beverages included between 11:00 am — Midnight (discount on other beverages including Champagne and imported wines)- Extended check out until 2:00 pm
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z