Sentences with phrase «chemical oceanographer»

-- Mallory Pickett is a first - year masters student in the lab of chemical oceanographer Andreas Andersson at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego
Ken Buesseler, a chemical oceanographer at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, and Henrieta Dulaiova, chemical oceanographer at University of Hawaii have each been awarded a grant from the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Division of Ocean Sciences to study the issue further, looking in to concentrations of radionuclides in both the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.
Mass is not a chemical oceanographer, but he is a scientist with some familiarity with these issues.
Pedler, a marine biology graduate student at Scripps, spent several years working with Scripps marine microbiologist Azam and chemical oceanographer Aluwihare in designing a system that would precisely measure carbon consumption by individual bacterial species.
Conditions may only worsen after 2100, warns Ken Caldeira, a chemical oceanographer at the Carnegie Institution.
«Our original goal was to double what the Japanese have achieved with absorption capacity,» says PNNL chemical oceanographer Gary Gill.
«We've known for a number of years that the oceans take up a lot of CO2,» says Christopher Sabine, a chemical oceanographer with the NOAA office in Seattle.
«It's anywhere from 10 to 100 times faster than anything we've seen over the last million years,» said Richard Feely, a chemical oceanographer and senior researcher with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
The actual fate of H. sericeus and its associates may still be unclear, but the findings are still potentially worrisome, says Giora Proskurowski, a chemical oceanographer at the University of Washington, Seattle.
«We found that mere absorption of CO2 from the atmosphere into the ocean was enough to harm marine creatures,» says Ken Caldeira, a chemical oceanographer now at the Carnegie Institution of Washington in Stanford, California.
Water scientists, including physical and chemical oceanographers, marine biologists and geologists, meteorologists, and lake scientists called limnologists collect many types of data from instruments installed on moorings
Ocean acidification could devastate coral reefs and other marine ecosystems even if atmospheric carbon dioxide stabilizes at 450 ppm, a level well below that of many climate change forecasts, report chemical oceanographers Long Cao and Ken Caldeira of the Carnegie Institution's Department of Global Ecology in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.
What interests me in regard to accelerated anthropogenic ocean acidification and global temperature rise, which are being monitored by instrumentation worldwide, are the vast amounts of data reported and the longitudinal studies done by glaciologists, marine biologists, chemical oceanographers, botanists, climatologists, reef specialists, and their colleagues in other scientific disciplines.

Not exact matches

An international project, involving oceanographers from the University of Southampton, has produced a «chemical atlas» providing unprecedented insight into the distributions of key elements, isotopes and other substances in the world's oceans.
Meanwhile, WHOI oceanographer Elizabeth Kujawinski has been studying the 800,000 gallons of chemical dispersant used to break down subsurface oil.
As Dr. Mackey cited in the published article Sea Change: UCI oceanographer studies effects of global climate fluctuations on aquatic ecosystems: «They would tell us about upwelling and how the ocean wasn't just this one big, homogenous bathtub, that there were different water masses, and they had different chemical properties that influenced what grew there,» she recalls.
Those signing the letter include the world's largest scientific society, American Chemical Society, and groups that represent meteorologists, public health experts, biologists, Earth scientists, oceanographers, geologists, crop researchers, bug, fish and reptile experts, as well as mathematicians and statisticians.
Marine biogeochemists and biological oceanographers have a good understanding of the processes which control phytoplankton biomass, such that a decrease in global phytoplankton biomass of the magnitude described by Boyce et al. can not be explained by other physical, chemical, and biological changes which have been observed.
A new study by an international team of oceanographers published in the September 29, 2005 issue of Nature reports that ocean acidification could result in corrosive chemical conditions much sooner than previously thought.
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