Sentences with phrase «out of the ocean at»

Therefore, the finding that surface heat flux is out of the ocean at low frequencies does not demonstrate an important role for the ocean circulation in driving the AMO.

Not exact matches

And with good reason; millions of entrepreneurs and businesspeople have embraced the idea that carving out a slice of an existing market can certainly be effective, but finding new opportunities — finding blue oceans — is even better, since those gains don't have to come at the expense of other businesses or other people.
Aldrin, a fairly prolific presence on social media, recently posted a few tweets looking back at the mission, including photos of the forms that he, Armstrong and fellow crew member Michael Collins filled out when they arrived in Honolulu after splashing down in the Pacific Ocean.
At last count, he's been fly - fishing out in Jackson Hole, deep sea wreck diving in the Atlantic Ocean, quail hunting in Georgia and, best of all, he climbed to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro — all within that past year alone!
«If he returns without any concession, it would be a humiliating blow since he's already gone out of his way to distance himself from the Philippines» allies,» Jay Batongbacal, an ocean lawyer at the University of the Philippines, told Chatham House's Bill Hayton.
As I stared out the oval - shaped window at the ocean and beaches below, a sort of heaviness and a sense of finality came over me.
Our attempts at this dying will succeed only if we men share in God's dying, just as our thinking can succeed only because it is a drop out of the ocean of His intelligence: but we can not share God's dying unless God dies; and He can not die except by being a man.
To gain some perspective on the impact humanity has on the Universe at large, sail out into the middle of the ocean.
Wie, playing in her tour's season - opening Pure Silk - Bahamas LPGA Classic, made her first eagle of the new year with a hole - out for a 3 on the par - 5 11th hole at the Ocean Club Golf Course on Paradise Island.
In a secluded spot on the magnificent beach at Siasconset (for instance), looking out to Spain over 3,000 miles of unbroken ocean, a man is about as far away as he may hope to get from things in this shrunken world.
My guy got fussy at the grocery store yesterday, so I turned on some ocean waves, and combined with the motion of the cart, he was out in seconds.
«Too often, our oceans are out of sight and out of mind for people in the Midwest,» said Wade Berger, manager of the Teen Learning Lab at Shedd Aquarium.
For a glimpse of possibilities, check out the video below, and note that the Grassroots Mapping image is the size of a SINGLE PIXEL at the resolution Google Earth has of the open ocean.
Different kinds of plastic may be suspended at different depths — a dreadful rainbow of rubbish spanning the ocean from top to bottom — but no one has done the research to find out.
Though most of these particles stick to solids and might be filtered out at wastewater plants, a small percentage probably escapes treatment, and those particles would be discharged into lakes, streams, oceans and other waterways, said Gruden.
But there's much less information out there on what people actually think about the ocean and some of the protection measures,» says California Sea Grant Extension Specialist Jennifer O'Leary, a study coauthor who is based at California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo.
«Ocean ridges are the most dynamic places on our planet, and this is the first cabled observatory that goes out to one,» says oceanographer Peter Rona, who uses NEPTUNE to study the dynamics of the deep - sea volcanoes from his lab at Rutgers University in New Jersey.
Using an earth system modeling approach, Deutsch and scientists at the National Center for Atmospheric Research and the Georgia Institute of Technology mapped out changing oxygen levels across the world's oceans through the end of the 21st century.
«It makes sense, because the coast is a much more complicated environment, whereas the open ocean is more homogeneous and the features are more spread out in space and time,» said coauthor Daniel Costa, a distinguished professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at UC Santa Cruz.
Instead, the team points out that similar swings in different isotopes» levels, occurring in both parts of the world, suggest that the two regions were experiencing the same changes in ocean chemistry at the same time.
Timothy Lyons at the University of California, Riverside, and colleagues have worked out how phosphate levels changed in Earth's oceans over the last 3 billion years by measuring the relative amounts of phosphorus in 700 samples from various rock formations around the world.
We have scooped one 8 - ounce glass out of the ocean, stared at it and said, is there a fish there?
Staking out a different kind of property claim, a Russian submarine planted that nation's flag at the bottom of the Arctic Ocean, at the terrestrial North Pole, in 2007.
«Very old ice probably exists in small isolated patches at the base of the ice sheet that have not yet been identified, but in many places it has probably melted and flowed out into the ocean
A research group comprising Project Researcher Yusuke Yamashita, Assistant Professor Tomoaki Yamada, Professor Masanao Shinohara and Professor Kazushige Obara at the University of Tokyo Earthquake Research Institute and researchers at Kyushu University, Kagoshima University, Nagasaki University, and the National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Prevention, carried out ocean bottom seismological observation using 12 ocean bottom seismometers installed on the seafloor of Hyuga - nada from April to July 2013.
In 1991 Delaney, an oceanographer at the University of Washington, went out for a drink one evening with Alan Chave, an ocean engineer and marine geophysicist based at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
I went out there with marine biologists from all over the world in a Scripps Oceanographic Institution expedition trying to look at, you know, what would the baseline be for a truly healthy ocean that had not been overfished and overflushed with chemicals and all the other things that we dump into the ocean — and from those examples, I started to get an idea of what the world might look like without us, but then it occurred to me to really understand, I would also have to get a baseline for what was the world like before us.
«Given that atmospheric rivers over the Atlantic and Pacific oceans appear as coherent filaments of water vapor lasting for up to a week, and that Lagrangian coherent structures have turned out to explain the formation of other geophysical flows, we wondered whether Lagrangian coherent structures might somehow play a role in the formation of atmospheric rivers,» said study coauthor Vicente Perez - Munuzuri, a physicist at the University of Santiago de Compostela in Spain.
«What makes this discovery particularly noteworthy is that we mapped out a landscape of bioessential elements in the ocean that was far more perturbed than we expected, and the impacts on life were big,» said Timothy W. Lyons, a professor of biogeochemistry at UCR, Owens's former advisor and the principal investigator on the research project.
«It's no longer just a sailing competition «says Jerome Milgram, professor of ocean engineering at the Massachusetts Instuitute of Technology and designer of four out of the five US yachts which originally entered.»
«We're trying to understand how what we're doing to the Earth's atmosphere and oceans will play out in the future,» says Bette Otto - Bliesner, who runs a full - complexity climate model — and its 1.5 million lines of code — through a supercomputer named Yellowstone at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder.
An explosion of designs for harvesting wave energy could make the process competitive at last — and they're heading out to the ocean for testing
In July, the young break out of their eggs, dash across the sand, and set out for the ocean in a frenzied swim lasting at least 30 hours.
«There are some who accuse the news media of being «doom and gloom» when it comes to the oceans, so we set out to test whether this was empirically true,» adds Jennifer Jacquet, an assistant professor in the Department of Environmental Studies at NYU and co-author on the study.
At the mouth of the Bay of Fundy, just off the coast of Maine, a tidal power system built and operated by the Ocean Renewable Power Company (ORPC) draws energy from currents created as 100 billion tons of water flow into and out of the bay.
Year - round ice - free conditions across the surface of the Arctic Ocean could explain why Earth was substantially warmer during the Pliocene Epoch than it is today, despite similar concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, according to new research carried out at the University of Colorado Boulder.
«What we are doing is really trying to fill out the detail of what their role is in the ocean,» said Carl Meyer, an assistant researcher at the Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.
Next, Louca and his colleagues want to find out what drives the puzzling variation of species performing the same function, and whether this matters at all to our ocean's biochemistry.
«We're confident it will work now that we have figured out how to launch a torpedo from an Antarctic research vessel,» says Garth Paltridge, director of the Institute of Antarctic and Southern Ocean Studies at the University of Tasmania.
The team is trying to understand life history traits of benthos at the initial stage and the influence of ocean currents in order to find out how these organisms expand their habitat and respond to environmental changes.
Looking through the portholes of the submersible ALVIN near the bottom of the Pacific Ocean in 1979, American scientists saw for the first time chimneys, several meters tall, from which black water at about 300 degrees and saturated with minerals shot out.
«These findings demonstrate a single origin of gills that likely corresponds with a key stage in vertebrate evolution: when some of our earliest relatives transitioned from filtering particles out of water pumped through static bodies to actively swimming through the oceans,» says lead author Dr Andrew Gillis, a Royal Society University Research Fellow in Cambridge's Department of Zoology, and a Whitman Investigator at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, US.
Beyond the worm and out the window, the land seems to extend forever, sort of like looking at the ocean, except it's land.
«There is a lot of potential out there for jumping to conclusions that may not be warranted,» Lubchenco said at a research symposium in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, organized by the Consortium for Ocean Leadership.
«It turned out that a staggering change occurred in the composition of continents at the same time free oxygen was starting to accumulate in the oceans,» Smit said.
«It doesn't follow that it's relevant to today,» says George Philander, an ocean scientist at Princeton University, who points out that today's ocean currents are very different from those of the Eocene.
Unlike traditional shipboard sonar measurements — which bounce waves off the seafloor and have mapped out a mere 20 percent of the planet's oceans — the satellites captured subtle variations in Earth's gravitational pull at the water's surface.
Like Earth, Mars must have received a lot of water at birth; some researchers think the plains that cover most of its northern hemisphere were once the bed of a vast, shallow ocean, filled by cataclysmic floods of water cascading out of the southern highlands.
«We can't assess the state of the oceans without knowing what's being taken out of them,» says Daniel Pauly, a fisheries scientist at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, who led the study.
As Japan suffered the worst earthquake in the country's recorded history, tsunami waves fanned out across the Pacific Ocean at the speed of a jetliner
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