Sentences with phrase «life in the seas since»

And using the oceans as a sink causes acidification that scientists now think may cause the most rapid and disruptive change to life in the seas since catastrophic events tens of millions of years ago (see Ocean acidification due to increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide, Royal Society, August 2005 and The other CO2 problem, New Scientist, August 2006).

Not exact matches

Founder Lee Williamson made salt his living in 2002, and since then this San Francisco - based sea salt seller has been on a tear — growing 296 % in just the past three years.
A Rocha was speaking after a study by the World Wildlife Fund and the Zoological Society of London found the level of marine life in world's seas has halved since 1970.
In Kerala, the fisherfolk know how fishing by modern boats destroys not only the livelihood of the fisherfolk but also the fish in the sea since unlike the traditional fishing community the boat fishing has no sensitivity to the natural cycle of fish lifIn Kerala, the fisherfolk know how fishing by modern boats destroys not only the livelihood of the fisherfolk but also the fish in the sea since unlike the traditional fishing community the boat fishing has no sensitivity to the natural cycle of fish lifin the sea since unlike the traditional fishing community the boat fishing has no sensitivity to the natural cycle of fish life.
SARASOTA — Scientist Carl Luer has spent most of his life studying an animal humans inherently fear: sharks.The predators of the sea have been the villains of thriller tales since the 1974 novel, Jaws They've invaded the streets of Los Angeles in the...
Her life is in danger since the sea holds deep dark secrets as well.
Since 2010, Indiana University, in collaboration with other organizations, has been working to turn the Begoña wreck site into a living museum of the sea.
Since we headed south from the Falkland Islands, I've had a crash course in both geology and life at sea.
In the decades since 1960, the nearby Aral Sea, where the fish once lived, has shrunk to a quarter of it's original size due to diversion for irrigation.
Possuelo had helped initiate a sea change in federal policy toward indigenous tribes by persuading the government that the natives should be left alone, to live exactly as they have since prehistoric times.
A version of this hypothesis has been around since Greeks theorized that all living things came from the sea, but it gained the most popularity in 1972, when Elaine Morgan, an award - winning Welsh television writer, advocated for it in her book The Descent of Woman.
While the new finding exposes the unexpected capability of a significant species in carbon cycling, the scientists say there is much more to the story since whole communities of microbes may interact together or live symbiotically in the microscopic ecosystems of the sea.
Calvert Island, in particular, is among the few places worldwide with a sea level that has remained relatively stable since the last ice age, a boon for scientists looking to study how people have lived for the past 15,000 years.
Regarding iodine: Years and years ago, when the original paleo folks roamed the earth and buildings where caves, my high school biology teacher told us that since we lived on the west coast, not far from the sea (Los Angeles County), we got all the iodine we needed from plants that grow in the soil.
It's a time when one could wander a studio lot, open the door to any given soundstage, and discover some sort of wonder: a cowboy as adept with a six - string as he is with six - shooter, a giant pool where mermaids perform a water ballet to the music of a live orchestra, a tavern where sailors about to ship out sing in lament of the absence of dames at sea and dance with each other (since — wink — they're going to have to get used to that situation — wink again), or a lavish bacchanal hosted by a Roman centurion who's on the verge of accepting a new kind of faith.
And in Island Beneath the Sea, her first work of fiction since 2006, she asks us to confront a fundamental need that, for most, is taken entirely for granted: freedom — its cost, worth and meaning.The novel follows the life of Tété, a slave in the colony of Saint - Domingue (now...
As life heats up (literally if you consider that in September climate scientists announced that Arctic sea ice has shrunk to its smallest surface area since 1979, and an ice - free summer in the Arctic may now happen within the next few years, not the next centu...
Also don't forget to bring your snorkel gear since the beach at Bahia de las Aguilas has some extraordinary sea life right off the beach and is probably the best site in the country for snorkeling.
The Wildlife Conservation Society, in conjunction with the Belize Department of Fisheries, have been conducting field research on sea turtles living in the coral reefs in and around Glover's Reef Atoll since 2007.
[69] Some recent observations indicate that historic presences of resident whales are possible: a group of two or three were observed feeding in Izu Ōshima in 1994 for almost a month, [71] two single individuals stayed in Ise Bay for almost two months in the 1980s and in 2012, the first confirmed living individuals in Japanese EEZ in the Sea of Japan and the first of living cow - calf pairs since the end of whaling stayed for about three weeks on the coastline of Teradomari in 2014.
Since scuba diving is not allowed in the waters surrounding the islands you can only see the sea life by snorkelling.
Turtles, Lion Fish, and Nudibranch, Oh my... Diving around the Indonesian triangle comprised of Gili Air, Amed, and Lembongan, there is so much sea life that it is easy to overlook the everyday critters that tend to get forgotten throughout our dive since we are looking for the «Big» fish in the ocean blue or...
I took bucket showers in Laos, swam in the Arabian sea at midnight, I was an extra in a Bollywood film, channelled my inner Carrie as I moved to New York, fell in love with Italy, and moved to Bali only to end up booking a one - way flight to London where I've been living happily since October 2015.
Favorite marine life: Common Octopus Favorite dive site: Orange Canyon Country of Origin: England What I love most about diving in Cayman Brac: Diversity of sea life My best diving memory: Wild dolphin encounter while diving St Maarten Been in Cayman Brac since: 2016
Since then we have made diving our life and passion and dive ever since every dive season in the AndamanSince then we have made diving our life and passion and dive ever since every dive season in the Andamansince every dive season in the Andaman Sea!
Juan Canela was born inland but since a young age has lived (almost always) near the sea, in different places.
Reproduced: Norbert Lynton, «Barbara Hepworth», Arts Review, vol.13, no. 11, 3 - 17 June 1961, p. 13 Mary Watson, «Sea Inspires the Sculptress», Auckland Star, July 1962 Owen Broughton, «The Technique of Recent British Sculpture», Bulletin of the National Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide, April 1963 (unpag., installation) «Fascinating, horrifying and sensual», China Mail, Hong Kong, 17 Aug. 1964 Denis Farr, British Sculpture Since 1945, 1965, pl.4 «Works of Eminent British Sculptors on View», Times of India, Delhi, 17 Nov. 1965 J.P. Hodin, «Vom Stil der Barbara Hepworth: Zuden Arbeiten der englischen Bildhauerin», Die Kunst and das Schöne Heim, vol.64, no. 7, April 1966, p. 276 Keith Roberts, «London», Burlington Magazine, vol.110, no. 782, Aug. 1966, p. 301 A.M. Hammacher, Modern English Sculpture, 1967, p. 86 (in col.) Guy Burn, «Hepworth», Arts Review, vol.20, no. 7, 3 April 1968, p. 184 Christopher Neve, «Holes in a Sculptor's Landscape: Barbara Hepworth», Country Life, vol.143, no. 3710, 11 April 1968, pp. 887 Bijutsu Techo, Japanese monthly mag., Aug. 1970, p. 3 Cross 1984, p. 114, pl.70 (in col.) Lesley Jackson, The New Look: Design in the Fifties, Manchester, 1991, p. 56 Michael Tooby, An Illustrated Companion to the Tate St Ives, 1993, p. 13 Andrew Causey, «Liverpool and New Haven: Barbara Hepworth», Burlington Magazine, vol.136, no. 1101, Dec. 1994, pp.860 - 1, p. 860
a great irony I have observed while working at sea since 1983 in the global offshore oil & gas industry is the explosion of marine life that occurs in and around offshore drilling rigs.
Native groups have lived in the extreme north since the last ice age by praying primarily on sea mammals and building protection from the elements by adapting to the local conditions.
Life moved on, and around mid 1996, I joined (or rather rejoined, since an older version had been discontinued) an interesting market experiment, the Foresight Exchange which traded (via a reputation - based currency) in future possibilities including some climate change - related predictions like sea level rise.
Simply put, we NEED the seas that we are currently almost half way to killing [half of coral reefs already dead or severely damaged and dying, phytoplankton unable to make their defensive carbonate «shells» because of CO2 acidification of the oceans... these are the base feed of most life in the oceans, fisheries are failing because their food is being killed by us, and we are of course next in line to starve... it makes little sense since we know all this...]
Since it went live in early November, Blueprint has been rolled out «from sea to shining sea,» he said, reaching attorneys across the country.
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