Sentences with phrase «oceanographer john»

Also known as the «Iron Hypothesis», this process is more accurately called Ocean Micro Nutrient Replenishment and was first proposed by oceanographer John Martin in 1993.
Oceanographer John Martin first suggested this ultra-simple idea, perhaps somewhat playfully, almost as an advertising schtick, to help him get research money.
In the book Understanding Sea - level Rise and Variability, released on Sunday, Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) oceanographer John Church said the best way to predict the impacts of climate change is to look at the sea.
«The Iron Hypothesis» is the theory first put forward by oceanographer John Martin in 1990.
Oceanographer John Englander, author of «High Tide On Main Street» explains why it is unstoppable, regardless of efforts to be «green» and sustainable.
As the deceased oceanographer John Martin of Moss Landing Marine Observatories in California famously said in 1988: «Give me half a tanker of iron, and I'll give you the next ice age.»
CSIRO oceanographer John Church in Hobart, Australia, agreed that 15 new jobs will not compensate for the «loss of skills» walking out the door.
1 One proposal, first suggested in the late 1980s by oceanographer John Martin of the Moss Landing Marine Laboratories in California, involves seeding ocean surfaces with iron to promote phytoplankton blooms that will soak up carbon dioxide, eventually exporting it into the deep ocean.
The study suggests that layers of sediments perhaps 10 to 20 meters thick can seal the sea floor and make seamounts the most important conduits for heat and fluid flow — especially on the sloping flank of a midocean ridge, says oceanographer John Sclater of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California.
To find out, oceanographers John Kessler of Texas A & M University and David Valentine of the University of California, Santa Barbara, collected more than 700 water samples around the spill that summer and fall.

Not exact matches

John Delaney was among the first oceanographers to grasp the potential power of cabled observatories.
For the first time, investigators will be able to observe the extreme events that shape the planet in real time, remarks John Delaney, a physical oceanographer at the University of Washington.
The EIFEX paper is «a careful scientific study» that has «refined our understanding of biogeochemical processes that influence climate,» adds John Cullen, an oceanographer with Dalhousie University in Halifax, Canada.
«The Canadian success is absolutely fantastic,» says John Delaney, an oceanographer at the University of Washington, Seattle, who helped to dream up the idea for NEPTUNE and is working on the US project.
John Hunter is an oceanographer at the Antarctic Climate & Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre, which is based in the University of Tasmania.
«This is a clear - cut case of censorship,» the author, Dr. John B. Anderson, an oceanographer at Rice University, told Raw Story.
Dalhousie University oceanographer and computer modeler John Cullen finds that particularly frustrating.
Other research on this subject disagrees with its conclusion - a fact illustrated by comments made by oceanographer and climate scientist John Church.
Tim Carmichael — President, Coalition for Clean Air Theo Colborn — President, The Endocrine Disruption Exchange Jeremy Jackson — Oceanographer, Scripps Institute for Oceanography Tzeporah Berman — Campaign Director & Founder, Forest Ethics Gloria Flora — Director, Sustainable Obtainable Solutions Mikhail Gorbachev — Founding President, Green Cross International, 1990 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Omar Freilla — Director, Green Worker Cooperatives Wallace J. Nichols — Senior Scientist, The Ocean Conservancy Diane Wilson — Author, An Unreasonable Woman Andrew Weil — Director, Program for Integrative Medicine, University of Arizona Thomas Linzey — Executive Director, Community Environment Legal Defense Fund Michel Gelobter — President, Redefining Progress Jerry Mander — Director, International Forum of Globalization William McDonough — Architect, William McDonough & Partners (as Bill McDonough) Bruce Mau — Creative Director, Bruce Mau Designs John Todd — Ecological Designer Rick Fedrizzi — President & CEO, US Green Building Council Greg Watson — Vice President, Massachusetts Technology Collaborative Lester Brown — President, Earth Policy Institute Herman Daly — Professor, University of Maryland, Former Senior Economist, World Bank Betsy Taylor — Founder, Center for the New American Dream Wade Davis — Explorer - in - Residence, National Geographic Society Leo Gerard — President, United Steel Workers International Union Mathew Petersen — President & CEO, Global Green USA Peter Warshall — Ecologist, Whole Earth Catalogue Andy Lipkis — President & Founder, Tree People Rest of cast listed alphabetically: David Attenborough (archive footage) George W. Bush (archive footage) Al Gore (archive footage) Arnold Schwarzenegger (archive footage) Brian Williams (archive footage)
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