A new study from the Ohio State University have tripled the known types of viruses
living in oceans around the world, providing new insights on the role of viruses in marine environment.
Life in the ocean around Gran Canaria is so beautiful and with the rock formations it... More
Not exact matches
We see the same creativity of God all
around us today
in the
life of plants and animals and
in all things such as the waters of the
ocean and the air we breathe.
Practice water safety: teach your child to swim, do not let your child play
around any water (lake, pool,
ocean, etc.) without adult supervision (even if he is a good swimmer), always wear a
life preserver or safety vest when on a boat, and childproof the pool by enclosing it
in a fence with a self - closing, self - latching door.
In fact, marine
life may be stirring the
oceans and moving nutrients
around as much as winds or tides.
From their vantage points
in labs and
living rooms
around the world, oceanic explorers now plug into an ever - changing world once cloaked
in darkness, and tap into the pulse of the
ocean as it
lives and breathes.
While oxygen is believed to have first accumulated
in Earth's atmosphere
around 2.45 billion years ago, new research shows that
oceans contained plentiful oxygen long before that time, providing energy - rich habitat for early
life.
Whether they are
living in cold waters near the North Pole or
around Antarctica or are visiting the deep
ocean, these animals» blubber is vital to their survival.
The four right whale species
live in distinct locations:
around 300 Atlantic Northern Right Whales
live in the North Atlantic; approximately 200 Pacific Northern Right Whales
live in the North Pacific; about 7,500 Southern Right Whales are spread throughout the southern part of the Southern Hemisphere; and 8,000 — 9,200 Bowhead Whales are distributed entirely
in the Arctic
Ocean.
The shale, named for the town of Eagle Ford, TX, is a geologic remnant of the ancient
ocean that covered present day Texas millions of years ago, when the remains of sea
life (especially ancient plankton) died and deposited onto the seafloor, were buried by several hundred feet of sediment, eventually turning into the rich source of hydrocarbons we have today.The shale was first tapped
in 2008 and now has
around 20 active fields good producing over 900 million cubic feet per day of natural gas.
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
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
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
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
in seawater unfavorable to the maintenance of their calcareous skeletons and shells (a condition referred to as CaCO3 - undersaturation).
At 8.05 a.m. local time, the Agency for Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics
in Jakarta issued a bulletin about a hypothetical tsunami — modelled on the one that hit Sumatra on Boxing Day 2004 and claimed more than 200,000
lives — to national focal points
around the Indian
Ocean.
Although the evidence was subsequently contested, some single - celled microbial
life lacking a nucleus that segregates their internal DNA or RNA («prokaryotes») from the surrounding cytoplasm may have flourished
in darkness within cracks
in Earth's seafloor crust and
around deep, warm or boiling hot
ocean springs (hydrothermal or volcanic vents, such as at Lost City or at black smokers) without a need for light or free oxygen
in the
oceans or atmosphere.
This is why it's unlikely that anything alive is more likely to be swimming
in the depths of a strange
ocean than creeping
around above water on frozen orbs, even though the complexity of that
life (like the stromatolites and creepy blind
life forms thriving
around undersea hot - water vents) could be limited by how much light can reach so far into the abyss.
Microbial
life, however, should have survived
in or
around cracks
in warm
ocean seafloors, deep volcanic vents, surface volcanic springs, and other warm niches.
The revolutionary discovery
in the 1970s of a thriving complex marine ecosystem
around the hydrothermal vents of the Galapagos Rift on the
ocean floor of the eastern Pacific forever changed our understanding of habitability showing that
life could also arise and flourish
in the complete absence of sunlight
in conditions that were utterly toxic to any other
life forms on Earth.
(Inside Science)-- Andrew Mullen, Ph.D student at Scripps Institution of Oceanography
in San Diego, California, has been
around the
ocean his whole
life.
I know what you mean by the water portion, I
live on a lake and yeah, I am not real keen about sticking my face
in it and then after the stingray encounter
in the
ocean last Saturday I would have been a hot mess all
around!
I marched
in anti-war rallies, dated guys with ponytails, swam nude
in heated swimming pools, argued the meaning of
life around campfires with the Pacific
Ocean roaring
in my ears.
Jim (Affleck,
Ocean's Twelve) mopes
around aimlessly, his brother Tim (Corrigan, Slums of Beverly Hills) is suicidal, his mother (Place, Sweet Home Alabama) puts on her best face despite it all, his father (Cassel, The
Life Aquatic) always finds something to gripe at, and his uncle Evil (Boone Junior, Batman Begins) spends all his days
in a state of perpetual high.
A fight for survival ensues after two sisters (Mandy Moore, Claire Holt) exploring marine
life around Mexico, get trapped
in a shark cage at the bottom of the
ocean.
Related Reviews: National Treasure: Book of Secrets (2 - Disc Collector's Edition) • National Treasure (Original DVD) Starring Nicolas Cage: Knowing • Ghost Rider • Next • Con Air (UEE) • The Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call - New Orleans From Producer Jerry Bruckheimer: Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (3 - Disc Gift Set) • Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest • Glory Road • Deja Vu • King Arthur (Director's Cut) • G - Force Enemy of the State (Special Edition) • Crimson Tide (Unrated Extended Edition) • Remember the Titans (Director's Cut) Disney Adventure: Eight Below • The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe • Underdog New to DVD:
Ocean's Thirteen • Superbad (2 - Disc Unrated Extended Edition) • The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause 2 - Disc
Live Action Disney Sets: Tron (20th Anniversary Collector's Edition) • Miracle • The Princess Diaries (Special Edition) Mid-2000s: The Incredibles • The Pacifier • Holes •
Around the World
in 80 Days • America's Heart & Soul • Flightplan From Director Jon Turteltaub: Cool Runnings • National Treasure: Book of Secrets (sequel preview) From the Writers — The Wibberleys: The Shaggy Dog (2006) Jim Kouf: Snow Dogs History - Driven Entertainment: Voyagers!
A colouring sheet for students to use as part of an
ocean or seaside topic, or as inspiration for writing a story about creatures that
live in the water and world
around us.
But even when I am
in other communities
around the Bay Area, it is the San Francisco Bay Area I
live in, measured by the proximity to that marvelous city, home to green building codes, to universal health care, to bans on plastic bags, to mandatory composting, to rainbow flags waving proudly
in the Castro breeze, to dog walking on
Ocean Beach, to watching a ballgame at AT&T park, to the guy you love and hate at the same time, the great Mayor himself, Mr. Gavin Newsom.
Whether they are gliding
around reefs
in the
oceans or crawling across a field toward a cluster of shady trees, turtles and tortoises work to keep nature
in balance and share peace and beauty with all other
living things.
In Belize City, elite families lived in the same ocean - front neighborhoods, belonged to the same social clubs, and enjoyed a similar lifestyle centered around the extravagant conspicuous consumption of imported good
In Belize City, elite families
lived in the same ocean - front neighborhoods, belonged to the same social clubs, and enjoyed a similar lifestyle centered around the extravagant conspicuous consumption of imported good
in the same
ocean - front neighborhoods, belonged to the same social clubs, and enjoyed a similar lifestyle centered
around the extravagant conspicuous consumption of imported goods.
Suburbs
in this part of Sydney include the old money homes
around the harbour and the middle class who
live in suburbs from the Southern
Ocean Beaches.
The
ocean around NE Vancouver Island is world - renowned for scuba diving with these cold, current - fed waters being home to an extraordinary diversity of
life in jaw - dropping density and colour.
About Helly Hansen Founded
in Norway,
in 1877, Helly Hansen continues to protect and enable professionals making their
living on
oceans and mountains
around the world.
There is something extraordinary about those who arrive
in Gili Trawangan and dive at Dive Central Gili, they choose to stay with us longer than they imagined, postpone boats and departures to stay on this little island like no other, the paradise beach
life and
ocean steals our hearts and more often than not we stick
around for a while.
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...
Getting to the island, hiking
around awestruck by its gorgeous cliffs,
living among the birds and camping
in the middle of the Pacific
Ocean were just a few of the highlights.
Koh Haa is a collection of 5 enormous rocks that forms a natural lagoon
in the middle of the
ocean — and is also a haven for marine
life to gather
around.
The Maui
Ocean Center is a wonderful place to visit if you're interested
in learning about the underwater
life forms that dwell
around Maui and the other Hawaiian islands.
The strong currents of the outer reefs bring nutrient rich waters from thousands of miles
around, and
in turn, lure
in some of the most diverse
life in the
ocean, including everything from macro
life to pelagic spectacles that defy the eye.
From the bright peaks of snowy mountains, to the shadows of the forests, to the bustling city and down into the dark of the
oceans around the world, the video pays homage to world renowned nature documentaries as it gradually reveals a variety of Pokémon
in their real - world natural habitats — bringing augmented reality one step closer to
life.
They eventually settled on the concept of strange, deep - water animals
living in a dark
ocean space where they illuminated everything
around them; a world that Kazarova ended up creating entirely with black paper.
Female but maybe not Feminist, Biscayne Times, Victor Barrenechea, October 2008 Susan Lee - Chun Artist Profile, Theme Magazine, May / June 2008 Miami Contemporary Artists, Clear Magazine, April / May 2008 Voices, NY Arts, February / March 2008 Asian Artists on Display
in BMOCA Exhibits, Boulder Daily Camera, Jenny Bergen, February 22, 2008 Urban Art Access: Art Basel Miami Beach, December 2007 Art Basel Miami Beach Notebook: A Party for the Arty, Economist, Jessica Gallucci, December 2007 Miami Contemporary Artists Book, Julie Davidow & Paul Clemence, November 2007 Susan Lee - Chun, H Magazine (Spain), Pedro Paricio, November 2007 Hurricane Project I, El Nuevo Herald, Adriana Herrera, Sept. 30, 2007 Los grabados de Goya inician una interesante temporada, El Nuevo Herald, Adriana Herrera, Sept. 16, 2007 Eight make the cut, Miami Herald, Daniel Chang, September 15, 2007 To the Brink and Back, Miami New Times, Carlos Suarez de Jesus, September 13, 2007 Body Double: Through a lens starkly, LA Times, Holly Myers, September 12, 2007 Ever more galleries
in Wynwood, Miami Herald, Brett Sokol, September 7, 2007 Optic Nerve IX: MOCA Review, Miami Art Guide, Michelle Weinberg, September / October issue No. 10 Visual Power, Miami Herald, Tom Austin, August 5, 2007 Snitzer show brings 59 Homegrown Artists together, Miami Herald, Elisa Turner, July 22, 2007 Wynwood Gallery Installations show the District «Artistic Heart, Miami Herald, Brett Sokol, July 13, 2007 Stop at X, Broward & Palm Beach New Times, Michael MIlls, April 26, 2007 Asian Style and Taste, LA Times, Scarlet Cheng, January 11, 2007 Banquet Art Exhibition at Pacific Asia Museum, The Epoch Times, Dan Sanchez, Dec. 10, 2006 Critic's Pick, Miami Herald, Elisa Turner, December 8, 2006 Almost Famous,
Ocean Drive Magazine, October 2006 Young at Art, Miami Herald, Elisa Turner, September 10, 2006 Galleries & Museums, Chicago Reader, September 8, 2006 Home Groan, Miami New Times, Carlos Suarez De Jesus, August 16, 2006 Cuatro Artistas en Casa, El Nuevo Herald, Jose Antonio Evora, August 8, 2006 Urban Sprawl, Sun - Sentinel, Emma Trelles, July 30, 2006 Exploring Urban
Life With Art «WLRN ArtStreet with Meredith Porte, July 2006
Around Town, Coral Gables
Living Magazine, June / July 2006 Five Years and Going Strong, Design Miami Magazine (vol.1, No. 2), Tiffany Chestler, May 2006 Metro - Pictures, Miami Herald, Elisa Turner, May 14, 2006.
It could be found
in the internet
oceans of Cecile B. Evans's What The Heart Wants; the virtual bodies of water that the lifeless avatars float
around in throughout Chen Zhou's
Life Imitation; or the rolling navy waves and fuzzy stone - blue monitors
in Blake Williams» Prototype.
He has held numerous solo institutional exhibitions
around the world, including Florida
Living at the SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah (2017), TIME, Hernan Bas: a queer and curious cabinet at the Bass Museum of Art, Miami (2013), The Other Side at the Kunstverein Hannover (2012), Hernan Bas: works from the Rubell Family Collection, Miami (2007) and Brooklyn Museum of Art (2009), and has been included
in a number of important group exhibitions, including A Sum of its Parts, at Polk Museum of Art (2016), Tracing Shadows, at PLATEAU, Samsung Museum of Art (2015), Aquatopia, The Imaginary of the
Ocean Deep, at Nottingham Contemporary and Tate St. Ives (2013), Nightfall, MODEM Centre for Contemporary Art, Hungary, travelling to Galerie Rudolfinum, Prague (2012), Nothing
in the World But Youth, Turner Contemporary, Margate (2011), Busan Biennale, Korea (2008), Like Color
in Pictures, Aspen Art Museum (2007), Ideal Worlds - New Romanticism
in Contemporary Art, Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt (2005), Whitney Biennial (2004), and The Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami (2002).
He was a painter, potter, writer and naturalist who spent most of his
life working
in or
around his family's business, Shearwater Pottery
in Ocean Springs, Miss..
In yet another room, a
life - size barefoot boy spins atop a dais - the perfect place to view a celestial sky and sculptural sliver of moon and then rotate
around to witness a raging
ocean that gradually fades into a stretch of serene coast, complete with magical beached whale.
Between his Abstract Expressionist work and the
Ocean Park series, Diebenkorn seems to have been
in a state of limbo; as he toured
around and painted still -
lives etc..
Imagine a man or woman being so arrogant, and selfish, that they'd take a job driving a CO2 belching truck, or dig for coal
in a mine, or fish for salmon
in the
ocean, or fly a CO2 belching airliner, or flip beef patties that came from CH4 exhausting cows, or teaching a classroom of students all of whom belch CO2 and exhaust CH4 and whom will have offspring that produces even more of those evil gases, or working as a climate scientist
in an office heated by CO2 belching FFs and occasionally traveling
around the world by CO2 belching airliner — all the while using computers made from FFs and powered by CO2 belching FF power plants, or working as a Senator from Tennessee who was President of the USA for a few hours and who travels all over the world
in CO2 belching airliners, or one of the millions of people who mine, process, manufacture and transport every product you have ever seen
in your
life and all the ones you haven't seen as well.
Danny Bloom, a freelance writer, translator and editor
living in Taiwan, is on a one - man campaign to get people to seriously consider a worst - case prediction of the British chemist and inventor James Lovelock:
life in «polar cities» arrayed
around the shores of an ice - free Arctic
Ocean in a greenhouse - warmed world.
To investigate the extent to which nature or nurture determines marine animals» responses to
Ocean Acidification (OA) we carried out
in - situ transplants using tolerant and sensitive worms
living around a natural CO2 vent.
But, we
live in a temperature range
around the triple point, and the
ocean (being much cleverer than i) has discovered a way to put heat into the ice that i had not seriously considered: rain.
As for increased sealife
around oil rigs as a good thing (previous comment)-- please note that sea
life congregates
around outcroppings
in the
ocean —
in the case of oil rigs though, the sea
life ends up with dangerously high levels of mercury from mercury contaminated drilling muds.
But a single time scale just doesn't express the multi-compartment transfer rates — a fifth to a third of the CO2 remains
in the atmosphere after even a 40 - year half -
life of
ocean equilibration (which quite frankly agrees with my numbers — I get about a back of the envelope number of ~ 37 years half -
life, depending on the saturation limits), and the rest will be
around for quite a while.
More than 200,000 Antarctic blue whales used to
live in the Southern
Ocean — but 20th Century whaling decimated this population and latest estimates put this population at just
around 2,300 animals.