Hopefully people will realize that a shrimp isn't any thing more than a sea roach
It now washes down a river into the sea settles to the bottom and compresses for centuries.
One day it was dirt on the bottom of the ocean the next day dirt on the bottom of the ocean next day next day then Poof!
the Roman Colosseum and aqueducts the Great Walls of China which I have on good account can be seen from space (one of a few really) Stonehenge the Hagia Sophia Petra Taj Mahal the Panama canal Machu Picchu
and blocking up waterways it's not just altering the lay of the land; it's out there combating climate change a few carbon emissions at a time.
and sea lice devoured them. Then in 2006 Anderson began conducting research with Venus a cabled ocean observatory that broadcasts underwater views of offshore British columbia live over the Internet.
The researchers used a remotely operated vehicle to plunk a pig in view of a camera
which recorded the action as sea life destroyed it. Twenty-two pigs later and with more scheduled for this fall Anderson's team is learning how to tell
but we now know that sea life snipped away enough tissue that the feet fell off on their own.
Two pigs are tethered to an instrument platform to keep sea critters from dragging them out of camera range.
The deep-sea vehicle Ropos (remotely operated platform for ocean sciences) delivers the pigs and their instrument platform to a node and plugs in a webcam and sensors with dexterous arms.
Sea lice mob devours pig from the inside out Sandrine Ceurstemont editor New Scientist TVTHIS article originally appeared in the July 2013 issue of Popular Science.
°The top layers of the oceans would freeze over but in an apocalyptic irony that ice would insulate the deep water below
and prevent the oceans from freezing solid for hundreds of thousands of years. Millions of years after that our planet would reach a stable âÂ#Â00°the temperature at which the heat radiating from the planet's core would equal the heat that the Earth radiates into space explains David Stevenson a professor of planetary science at the California Institute of technology.
Humans could live in submarines in the deepest and warmest parts of the ocean but a more attractive option might be nuclear-or geothermal-powered habitats.
because the oceans tides are managed no longer by the gravitational pull of the Moon. There will also likely be massive tsunami's as a result of the earthquakes.
since the food chain in rivers/oceans would be disrupted by the end of photosynthesis so even canned tuna/salmon would be used up within a few weeks.
Krakatoa was a great mountain till it erupted with fire and a blast heard thousands of miles away that cast that Great Mountain into the sea.
The sea was full of Bodies from the Tsunamis more than 35000 of them the sea stayed red for weeks. 1884 was a year without a summer as the year 1816 was
Robert H. Mcnaught discovery of this comet was made with one of the more then 10 telescopes on Siding Spring Mountain Top at 3822 ft above sea level Schmidt telescope at Siding Spring Observatory it is in New south wales Australia.
#In Ancient Ice, Clues That Scientists Are Underestimating Future Sea Levelsthe skies do strange things at the NEEM camp a remote ice-drilling
Based on the study of the paleoclimate record in ice cores as well as the former locations of beaches and coral reefs researchers believe that the Eemian temperature increase likely pushed global sea levels as high as eight meters (26
Even if you stabilize temperature by 2100 sea levels will keep rising for many centuries after that says Gavin Schmidt a NASA climate modeler at the Goddard Institute for Space Studies who specializes in paleoclimate data.
The ice sheets will take hundreds of years to fully react to warmer ocean temperatures he says
That meltwater would account for only about two meters of global sea rise according to Dorthe Dahl-Jensen a paleoclimate researcher at the University of Copenhagen who led the NEEM project.
and policy for the years to come it projected that sea levels would rise anywhere between 18 and 59 centimeters by 2100 a range that many scientists saw as a poor estimate based on inadequate data.
The last report kind of punting on the whole sea level thing has been the driver of an enormous amount of effort in ice-sheet modeling says Schmidt.
and cooling and oceans rise and fall as water gets locked up in ice sheets then melts.
and the sea level rise gets a move on I would like to have a beach front property.
The ocean is accumulating it at a faster rate than the land. Btw we've seen these stretches of cooling in the past as well
And the suggestion that the oceans are still trapping more heat and warming while the surface hasn't warmed for the last 15 years doesn't hold water pardon the pun.
There is no evidence that the oceans are trapping any heat in fact it appears they are losing heat:
http://wattsupwiththat. com/2011/01/06/new-paper-on-argo-data-trenberths-ocean-heat-still-missing/@Frosttty:
and ocean temps from 1880 to present and the temperature has lined flat (and slightly declined) since just before 2000.
because this is not the hottest the Earth has ever been. www. ncdc. noaa. gov/sotc/service/global/global-land-ocean-mntp-anom/201201-201212. pngpicking out 2005
The greenhouse effect) means once the planet gets warmer and warmer then the oceans begin to evaporate...
You can get to a situation where the oceans begin to boil and the planet becomes so hot that the ocean ends up in the atmosphere.
And that happened to Venus...Hansen's research at NASA focused initially on studying the atmosphere of Venus
No runaway greenhouse effect no massive increase in sea levels. You see based on observations of the relationship of CO2
http://www. ncdc. noaa. gov/sotc/service/global/global-land-ocean-mntp-anom/201101-201112. png2000 years 10 proxy reconstructions:
Just between 2000 and 2008 the latest period in the study and the period of fastest depletion Americans brought enough water aboveground to contribute to 2 percent of worldwide ocean level rise in that time.
Yet strangely the earth's sea levels have not risen enough to account for all of this lost freshwater.
@Riff Raff*LOL*How do YOU know the seas haven't risen accordingly? Are you a scientist who studies these things?
Rockets need to scream through the stratosphere to the point 62 miles above the sea level where space is said conventionally to begin.
and take off from a carrier at open sea and has the radar signature of a mosquito.
There's a breeding colony of 3500 rhesus monkeys on a SC sea island. They're owned by the NIH
--i disagree--at one time there werent any massive oceans there must have been large seas between the continents---during the cooling period of earths formation steam was settled developing
which in the gaps between the continents causing water to develop in the gaps causing seas to develop
so millions of years ago the oceans hadnt been developed yet only these seas from from
and cross the world travelling around the sea between africa and north america coming to our part of
the world. the oceans were formed from the 4 glaciation periods that came about. during each glaciation period the gaps between the continents were getting filled up with water from the melted ice on top of the world from a gigantic block of ice many thousands
and by the time the last glaciation period ended the oceans had formed fully . but before thenprimates just migrated from africa to here walking around the sea. even camels were here. there bones have been found in tucsonarizona;
they migrated also travelling around the sea. in south america there are drawings on cliffs of animals that existed in africa
and apparently they migated from africa also travelling around the sea. there could have been two seas-one in the northern hemisphere
and one in the southern hemisphereand the animals leaving africa for south america could have travelled around a sea in the southern hemisphere. mr. george-i forgot to mention that
when the primates came to the united states they discovered there werent bananas here so they didnt stay
Sea levels are rising. Storms are becoming more severe. Really Popsci???Can we just report science and not some Greeie Leftist propaganda??
About 85%of the oxygen comes from the oceans. Every time you throw away a napkin
For example trash in the ocean is not the same argument when addressing manmade climate change.
We understand how oceans absorb the CO2 and acidify. We understand that global warming is creating thermal expansion of our oceans.
These things are facts. Oh but it's not us doing it. We have to be arrogant to think we could affect our big ol'planet.
and privacy in the deep woods of Ocean County to manufacture dyes and plastics on a massive scale.
They found plenty of willing partners among the farmers of Monmouth Burlington and Ocean counties.
Wilson offered his family farm in Ocean County's Plumsted Township as a dumpsite for Morton's toxic wastes
A generation later when investigators finally assessed the damage they identified two dozen major hazardous waste sites in Ocean County alone including seven farms and three town dumps.
The Ocean County Prosecutor's Office did not begin going after dumpers until 1980 when an investigator named Dane Wells started trying to track them down.
The Rustic Acres was a blue-collar landmark in Ocean County until it was torn finally down in the late 1970s.
Radiation is being in found in seaweed zooplankton and sea life in the oceans. Animal and plant mutations are being found everywhere.
and is a long time coming in the corporate world-it coming to a head just slightly after the establishment of a highly secure seed vault in the northern oceans
But what if at the same time we just ended up with skyscrapers growing the kinds of trees evolved for mountaintops and sea cliffs?
This spurs competetive research on an international level and (infinitely more important) opens the floodgates on neurological disease treatments and artificial intelligence.
and the underlying land or ocean surface and the amount of water vapor in the air. Warm air (high pressure) over warm water is fairly stable
and the oceans and land stay the same temperature storms will become LESS violent. If the atmosphere and the oceans and land warm at about the same rate--as global warmists assert--there will be no difference in the violence or frequency of storms;
which incidentally is what the data actually shows. In once sentence Obama preys on the unsubstantiated fears of the uninformed to further promote his already proven failure of an agenda.
The CO2NOW Climate Sheet enumerates the chain of causes that are driving humanityã¢Â#Â#s largest environmental crises âÂ#Âglobal warming climate change and ocean acidification.
and then started dumping trash in the ocean. Hell the rain forest are disappearing as we speak so no plants
Imagine a giant explosion in the sky followed by a blast wave that would level buildings knock the Golden gate bridge into the sea and subject an area between San francisco and San jose to total destruction.
Krakatoa was a great mountain till it erupted with fire and a blast heard thousands of miles away that cast that Great Mountain into the sea.
The sea was full of Bodies from the Tsunamis more then 35000 of them the sea stayed red for weeks. 1884 was a year without a summer as the year 1816 was
--which as Gooden pointed out is a public waterway--he never would have seen the illegal activity.
During the Eemian Stage sea level was about 8 meters higher than today and the water temperature of the North sea was c. 2°C higher than at present.
Lets see how high we can get the sea levels. Call Guinness when done! Depending on where you live the warm up can be quite beneficial.
How about the acidification of the oceans because of the absorption of CO2? Laurenra7 denies global warming thinks creationism should be taught as science
All the rest of the so-called supporting evidence--glacier mass balance satellite telemetry sea-level data CO2 saturation of the atmosphere and oceans arctic minimum sea ice extent etc.
if warming of the oceans release CO2 then we're in for even more atmospheric CO2. Currently the colder waters absorb CO2.
and of course if sea life is found underneath the icy surface we may be able to eat the fish found there.
Run out of clams we went to the ocean to find more clams. Present man trades in 0's and 1's and worthless paper we call dollars yen euro etc.
The GCF is intended also to help pay for resilience-related projects such as strengthening infrastructure to withstand global warming impacts like sea level rise--efforts that are termed adaptation.
Most Pacific Islanders says Ora are forced now to think about where to go as the sea level rises.
because its Taro Island location is only 6. 6 feet above sea level. Sea level rise is making Taro Island increasingly vulnerable to tsunamis
and storm surges. 5: 36 p m.:The next and final panel Voices From the Climate Frontlines is underway.
He says that his nation is already starting to drown because of sea level rise due to human-propelled climate change.
and preparation for climate change impacts like sea level rise and changing weather patterns. 4: 16 p m.:
and early warning systems for vulnerable nations to help them better plan for heavy weather and rising seas.
and impounding rushing rivers in an effort to throw two great oceans together. It is the greatest assault ever made upon nature;
The bigness of it all and its possibilities in changing the commerce of the seas the destiny of nations
For more than three hundred years it was the favorite highway from ocean to ocean and many thousands perished en route from tropical disease.
since nature made them poured out their accumulated filth to the sea; those that could not be drained were oiled;
and utilize the motor power of the ocean waves and the trade winds. All due honor to the engineers.
On the day of my visit in early February the water s surface elevation was 1108 feet above sea level (the Third Straw will meet the lake bed at 860 feet.
and passages and a flowing aqueduct that s turned the ground level into a swamp of pooling water and sucking mud.
which the Nobel-prize winning author made the case for creating a NASA for the oceans.
In an open letter to editor-in-chief Ernest Heyn Steinbeck argued that the investigation of Earth's oceans was critical to the success of humanity
I know enough about the sea to know how pitifully little we know about it. We have not as a nation and a world been alert to the absolute necessity of going back to the sea for our survival.
I do not think $21 billion or a hundred of the same is too high a price for a round-trip ticket to the moon.
when under the seas three-fifths of our own world and over three-fifths of our world's treasure is undiscovered unknown and unclaimed.
Please believe Ernie that my passion for the world's seas and underseas does not lessen my interest in our space probes.
Ernie I'm going to try to put down some of the reasons why I think it is really necessary to explore the sea.
There is something for everyone in the sea...food for the hungry...incalculable wealth...the excitement and danger of exploration...
But the seas he has changed not In our relation to three-fifths of the world we correspond exactly to Neolithic man earful ignorant and swinish.
And the huge agriculture of the seas we have ignored completely except to rip out the fringes for iodine or fertilizer.
I said that three-fifths of the earth's surface is under the seas ut with the washing down from the continents of minerals
More important in the near future the plankton the basic reservoir of the world's food live in the sea.
But it is possible that we may be driven back to our mother the sea because we are running out of supplies.
but for placing whole producing cities on the sea bottom. If our inventive minds were given the money
and moving of sea water it would be a very short time before life-giving water would flow to desert places
To me personally the oceans mean safety mystery and wonder. During the depression I lived by the sea
and took most of my protein food from it and lived very well indeed. I have studied the endless variety of ocean animal life undreds of thousands more species than are to be found on land.
Several years ago I went along as an observer on the Mohole Project. You remember that was the expedition
The movement to possess the sea must be given the strength and structure to move. We must explore our world
There is something for everyone in the sea ncredible beauty for the artist the excitement and danger of exploration for the brave and restless an open door for the ingenuity and inventiveness of the clever a new world for the bored food for the hungry and incalculable material
and then jumped across thousands of miles of open ocean to appear in Australia where it devastated the banana industry in the Darwin region.
Puckett estimated that just more than half of the material processed in Guiyu actually got recycled judging from the tons of plastic leaded glass and burned circuit boards discarded near waterways and in open fields.
and drainage tiles most ended up in landfills incinerators or the ocean. But by the time he saw Puckett s film Biddle had achieved quietly
Salt marshes are threatened by drainage polluted runoff and rising sea levels. Florida naturalists noticed that mangroves now grow in places that once were too chilly for the tropical trees.
and descended to the bottom of the sea looked in their own backyards (California) and explored the other side of the world (Africa).
The proposed expansion--roughly 2000 additional square miles--would encompass the largest upwelling site in North america better protecting the nutrient-rich waters that support everything from reefs and seabird colonies to endangered whales.
A Walk on the Ocean Floorthat was not the only new species found in the ocean this year.
Scientists at the Academy dove into their collections to discover 24 other new species that live in the world's oceans.
The color pattern it displays is a perfect camouflage that helps the animal blend into its habitat on the bottom of the sea.
This bamboo shark like a similar species on display at the Academy's Steinhart Aquarium uses its pectoral fins to walk along the ocean floor.
But University of Utah biologists discovered that roly-poly pikas living in rockslides near sea level in Oregon can survive hot weather by eating more moss than any other mammal.
The river there is only about 150 feet above sea level. In the gorge--which runs roughly 30 miles east-to-west--these American pikas--Ochotona princeps--live among the rocks on moss-covered talus slopes.
#Saving Fijis coral reefs linked to forest conservation upstreamthe health of coral reefs offshore depend on the protection of forests near the sea according to a new study by the Wildlife Conservation Society that outlines the importance of terrestrial protected areas
Thinking about the connections between the land and sea is done rarely when designing protected areas--Fiji is leading the way globally.
Looking to support the committee's efforts to land-sea planning initiative the study authors systematically analyzed six scenarios for expanding Fiji's network of terrestrial protected area networks with the aim to uncover how well each approach did to protect different forest types
and link land to sea conservation helps to ensure the long term security of their globally important coral reef ecosystems while supporting the livelihoods and resilience of coastal communities.
Cellulose could come from a variety of biological sources including trees plants algae ocean-dwelling organisms called tunicates
As the highest glacier in the eastern Alps (2. 4 miles or 3. 9 km above sea level) Alto dell'Ortles is located in the heart of Europe--one of the most industrialized and populated areas
Since coming out of the ice age some 10000 years ago summer solar insolation in the Northern hemisphere has been decreasing as a result of the Earth's changing orbit according to Edward Brook a paleoclimatologist in Oregon State's College of Earth Ocean
#¢Sea levels will likely rise by an average of 3 feet by the end of this century.
Of particular concern is that storm surges will compound impacts of rising sea levels Ingram said.
Little of it reaches waterways. On the floodplains high rates of nitrogen fixation occur in thick slimy black mats of cyanobacteria growing in seasonably submerged sediments and coating the exposed roots and stems of willows and sedges.
whether the Philistines and other Sea Peoples--groups of seafaring invaders from around the Aegean sea--made use of local pig breeds
Domestic European pig breeds may have been introduced by groups of Sea Peoples--including the Philistines mentioned in the Bible--who migrated to the coast of the Levant starting in the 12th century BCE and settled in places like Gaza Ashkelon and Ashdod.
ocean conditionsmany people use tree ring records to see into the past. But redwoods--the iconic trees that are the world's tallest living things--have so far proven too erratic in their growth patterns to help with reconstructing historic climate.
This is really the first time that climate reconstruction has ever been said done with redwoods Jim Johnstone who recently completed a postdoctoral position at the UW-based Joint Institute for the Study of the Atmosphere and the Ocean.
so they actually may tell you more about what's happening over the ocean than they do about
When seawater evaporates off the ocean to form clouds some drops fall as rain over the ocean
Related research by Johnstone shows that the amount of West Coast fog is tied closely to the surface temperature of the ocean
so redwoods may be able to tell us something about the long-term patterns of ocean change such as the Pacific Decadal Oscillation.
just add waterfrom a fish-eye view rice fields in California's Yolo Bypass provide an all-you-can-eat bug buffet for juvenile salmon seeking nourishment on their journey to the sea.
A land sea and space-grant university UNH is the state's flagship public institution enrolling 12300 undergraduate and 2200 graduate students.
Increasing nutrient levels affects our rivers lakes and oceans. Single cell plants called phytoplankton feed off the increased nutrients
The dead zone in the Gulf of mexico where the Mississippi meets the ocean has received much attention in the last decade and led to the creation of the Mississippi river/Gulf of mexico Watershed Nutrient Task force.
School of engineering and Applied sciences (SEAS. It is fully within our power as a nation to reduce our impact.
The team of scientists--comprising researchers from Harvard SEAS the National park service the USDA Forest Service the U s. Environmental protection agency
but they're integral for everything else that's dependent on them explains lead author Raluca A. Ellis who conducted the research as a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard SEAS.
outbreak that is tied to long-term changes in sea-surface temperatures from the Northern Atlantic ocean a trend that is expected to continue for decades.
The strongest climate correlation to spruce beetle outbreaks was above average annual values for the Atlantic Multi-decadal Oscillation or AMO a long-term phenomenon that changes sea-surface temperatures
In addition to AMO the researchers looked at two other ocean-atmosphere oscillations--the El nino southern oscillation and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation--as well as past temperatures precipitation and aridity to better understand the spruce beetle outbreaks.
and sea buckthorn according to a new study published today in the Canadian Journal of Plant science.
Thus our work supports the commercial development of buffaloberry chokecherry and sea buckthorn berries. According to the study:
#Caribou may be affected indirectly by sea-ice loss in the Arcticmelting sea ice in the Arctic may be leading indirectly to fewer caribou calf births and higher calf mortality in Greenland according to scientists at Penn State university.
Eric Post a Penn State university professor of biology and Jeffrey Kerby a Penn State graduate student have linked the melting of Arctic sea ice with changes in the timing of plant growth on land
The ongoing decline in sea ice now has been associated with increases in local temperatures inland in many parts of the Arctic.
We therefore hypothesized that sea-ice decline was involved in local warming and the associated advancement of the growing season for plants at the study site and so we set out to test that hypothesis Post said.
and Kerby used the statistically robust relationship between sea ice and the timing of plant growth to hindcast trophic mismatch to 1979
Post added that he and his team intend to study other ecological communities living near sea ice in future research.
Sea ice is part of a broader climate system that clearly has important effects on both plants and animals.
Exactly how sea-ice decline might affect species interactions in this and other types of food webs on land in the Arctic is a question that deserves greater attention Post said.
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