HYDRATE TURMERIC's only three ingredients are pure freeze dried coconut water, which contains potassium and electrolytes to replenish your body's fluids, organic turmeric and Aquamin ™, (a mineral rich,
calcified sea algae) which adds a wide array of beneficial minerals to every serving.
HYDRATE's only two ingredients are pure freeze dried coconut water, which contains potassium and electrolytes to replenish your body's fluids and Aquamin ™, (a mineral rich,
calcified sea algae) that adds a wide array of beneficial minerals to every serving of HYDRATE.
Not exact matches
Combines a unique blend of coconut milk powder, organic cacao and Aquamin (a mineral - rich,
calcified sea -
algae) with nutrient - packed coconut oil and red - palm oil.
In an unprecedented evolution experiment scientists from GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel and the Thünen Institute of
Sea Fisheries have demonstrated for the first time, that the single most important
calcifying algae of the world's oceans, Emiliania huxleyi, can adapt simultaneously to ocean acidification and rising water temperatures.
Bloom of
calcifying algae at the Barents
Sea, documented by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on the NASA satellite AQUA.
These include
sea stars,
sea urchins,
calcifying algae and tube - building worms.
«These
calcifying algae evidence two rapid decreases in the salt content, at approximately 8,400 and again 7,600 years ago, which can only be explained by the fact that a higher volume of low - saline surface water flowed from the Black
Sea into the northern Aegean at these times.
Researchers of the Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre, the Goethe University in Frankfurt and the University of Toronto have now detected evidence of this oceanographic event and an earlier sudden
sea - level rise in the fossils of tiny calcifying marine algae preserved in seafloor sediments in the Aegean S
sea - level rise in the fossils of tiny
calcifying marine
algae preserved in seafloor sediments in the Aegean
SeaSea.
Abrupt Rise in
Sea Level Delayed the Transition to Agriculture in Southeastern Europe (22/03/2018) Researchers of the Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre, the Goethe University in Frankfurt and the University of Toronto have detected evidence of this oceanographic event in the fossils of tiny
calcifying marine
algae preserved in seafloor sediments in the Aegean
Sea.
This hinders the ability of organisms such as molluscs,
sea urchins, coralline
algae and cold - water corals to produce their
calcified shells and skeletons, affecting their survival.