Sentences with phrase «ocean science when»

NEPTUNE Canada, the world's largest regional cabled undersea network, promises to usher in a new era of ocean science when it goes online December 8 *

Not exact matches

nice question — there was indeed a global ocean in earths history and it was salt water — according to modern science when the plates moved and enclosed land creating a land locked ocean which over time turn to fresh water by leaking the salt into the bedrock... or something like that — i have rough understanding.
Professor Damon Teagle, from Ocean and Earth Science at the University of Southampton and a veteran of numerous scientific ocean drilling expeditions, said: «It is very exciting for IODP to be using a British ship and new technologies to investigate the strange reactions that occur when seawater meets rocks of the upper maOcean and Earth Science at the University of Southampton and a veteran of numerous scientific ocean drilling expeditions, said: «It is very exciting for IODP to be using a British ship and new technologies to investigate the strange reactions that occur when seawater meets rocks of the upper maocean drilling expeditions, said: «It is very exciting for IODP to be using a British ship and new technologies to investigate the strange reactions that occur when seawater meets rocks of the upper mantle.
Another possible issue with attribution science, he says, is that the current generation of simulations simply may not be capable of capturing some of the subtle changes in the climate and oceans — a particular danger when it comes to studies that find no link to human activities.
But when three areas of ocean that tend to have lots of low - lying cloud were targeted with cloud brightening, levels of bleaching were the same as the control run (Atmospheric Science Letters, doi.org/m5n).
It is probably generated when water in the moon's subterranean ocean reacts with rock in its core, researchers report in the April 14 Science.
What happens when the world moves into a warm, interglacial period isn't certain, but in 2009, a paper published in Science by researchers found that upwelling in the Southern Ocean increased as the last ice age waned, correlated to a rapid rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide.
«When we modeled future shoreline change with the increased rates of sea level rise (SLR) projected under the IPCC's «business as usual» scenario, we found that increased SLR causes an average 16 - 20 feet of additional shoreline retreat by 2050, and an average of nearly 60 feet of additional retreat by 2100,» said Tiffany Anderson, lead author and post-doctoral researcher at the UH Mānoa School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology.
«When we included projected Antarctic wind shifts in a detailed global ocean model, we found water up to 4 °C warmer than current temperatures rose up to meet the base of the Antarctic ice shelves,» said lead author Dr Paul Spence from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science (ARCCSS).
In a study conducted in the region two years prior to when Matthew's trekked across the Caribbean Sea, the research team in the Upper Ocean Dynamics Laboratory at the University of Miami (UM) Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science deployed 55 aircraft ocean instruments from the National Oceanographic Atmospheric Administration's WP - 3D aircOcean Dynamics Laboratory at the University of Miami (UM) Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science deployed 55 aircraft ocean instruments from the National Oceanographic Atmospheric Administration's WP - 3D aircocean instruments from the National Oceanographic Atmospheric Administration's WP - 3D aircraft.
Fumio Inagaki from the Japan Agency for Marine - Earth Science and Technology, who made the discovery, says the lake probably formed when carbon dioxide seeped out through the ocean floor from a deep - sea volcano and pooled under a blanket of solid, icelike CO2 hydrate and deep - sea sediment.
«But when the MH370 search area was moved to the southern Indian Ocean, scientists from Curtin's Centre for Marine Science and Technology decided to recover the IMOS acoustic recorders located west of Rottnest Island.
When their waters get warmer, their metabolism accelerates and they need more oxygen to sustain their body functions,» said William Cheung, co-author of the study, associate professor at the Institute for the Ocean and Fisheries and director of science for the Nippon Foundation - UBC Nereus Program.
Lead author of the study Dr Tom Gernon, Lecturer in Earth Science at the University of Southampton, said: «When volcanic material is deposited in the oceans it undergoes very rapid and profound chemical alteration that impacts the biogeochemistry of the oceans.
The researchers found that the twistron could harvest power directly from ocean waves or — when sewn into a shirt — from the wearer's breathing motion, they report today in Science.
«The Science Of Getting Ripped» is just $ 39.95, a drop in the ocean compared to the huge benefits you'll get when you learn my secrets.
But the same report said core science principles are «easier to grasp when introduced through ocean examples,» and it urged the creation of ocean curriculums that more K - 12 teachers can use.
Also, in science class, they studied different biomes so they could understand what adventure we were stepping into when we arrived at Temescal Canyon, a large park near the Pacific Ocean.
Richard C. Murphy Ph.D, Director of Science and Education for Jean - Michel Cousteau's Ocean Futures Society, discusses his passion for sharing oceanic experiences with people, and gives us tips on when it's best to visit the coral reef.
Chris Caldow has been with NOAA since 2000 when he became a Knauss Marine Policy Fellow with the National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science's (NCCOS) Biogeography Branch at NOAA Headquarters, a unit specializing in mapping the distributions of marine plants and animals to aid decision makers faced with spatially explicit management decisions.
For the members of Bodhi Surf School, that feeling came to us when we learned about Wallace J. Nichols, a marine scientist and conservation activist, who uses science to prove why we as humans need the ocean and, consequently, why we should protect it.
When you suggested in an reply to a comment of mine in an older post that the planet was resilient and also mentioned the coral reefs, I thought it useless to reply in rebuttal, because the science so clearly already showed that persistent high water temperatures and the increasing acidification of ocean waters were highly likely to do away with coral reefs during our lifetime.
have you heard the latest joke about the wonders of science developing a solar powered freezing machine which when installed would refreeze the North Pole such that it would lower the ocean level 20 feet?
When the first studies of the XBT data were produced in then early 2000's, showing just how much heat had been added to the oceans, the climate science community labelled this «The Smoking Gun».
Dr. Pratt would have done far better service to the climate science if he pursued the idea from his initial draft: The second and third harmonics dominate, are largely untouched by the filtering, and can be associated with ocean oscillations of respective periods 83 and 55 years per our fit (75 and 50 years when fitted with HADCRUT3).
Prediction Continued improvements in modeling decadal - scale dynamics — and longer, when ice - sheet and deep - ocean dynamics are included — will continue to affirm the multi-decade arc of strong climate science that concludes «Hansen's worldview is right.»
He didn't intend to specialize in climatology when he stayed at Harvard to pursue a graduate degree, but he won a fellowship in atmospheric and ocean science that allowed him to continue studying his first love: applied mathematics and physics.
When we hear «it's been cooling since 1998» for the umpteenth time, we want to look instead at the recent developments in climate science about oceans, available, for example, at Tenney's blog cited below, which actually refine what we know rather than going around the merry - go - round.
If you aren't willing to admit when you've made a fundamental scientific mistake about source rock formation (that relates directly to your stated profession of hydrocarbon geology), then why should anyone listen to anything you have to say, particularly when it comes to atmospheric and ocean sciences?
In a new study published in the latest issue of the journal Science, Geerat Vermeij of UC Davis and Peter Roopnarine of the California Academy of Sciences write that climate change is creating conditions in the Arctic similar to those found during the warm mid-Pliocene epoch, about 3.5 million years ago, when a number of favorable factors helped many North Pacific mollusk species invade the warming Arctic Ocean and, eventually, the North Atlantic.
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