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Scientific American September 2008 Lucas Laursen |
Seismic "Noise"--Oil Prospecting Data Could Decipher Ocean Mixing A ring of warm, salty water in the Atlantic was recently imaged with seismic survey data taken 15 years ago |
Outside February 2005 |
The Monterey Academy Research System Submarines and unmanned submersibles--for the past 20 years the vanguard of oceanography--are limited by battery life and storms that can make deployment or recall impossible. All that's about to change. |
Science News February 9, 2008 |
Science Safari: Marine Cloudmakers Video that explains how marine particles get distributed to the atmosphere. |
Popular Mechanics August 2007 Karen C. Fox |
Open Ocean Lab FLIP Vessel: How it Works Shaped like a giant baseball bat, the 700-ton FLIP, or Floating Instrument Platform, is a Navy barge operated by Scripps Institution of Oceanography. Once towed to a site, the vessel flips to vertical. |
Geotimes July 2004 Naomi Lubick |
Ocean Management 101 In a recent report, the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy calls for a uniform national policy on ocean research -- including management of coastal areas such as the West Coast. |
IEEE Spectrum August 2011 Nicholas Makris |
New Sonar Technology Reveals City-size Schools of Fish Low-frequency sound waves improve ocean sensing. |
Scientific American December 2008 Barbara Juncosa |
Stations in the Seas: Permanent Underwater Observatories Scientists envisage unmanned labs on the floor of the ocean to conduct experiments and monitor climate change |
The Motley Fool April 26, 2007 Tom Taulli |
Ocean Power Sinking Fast Energy from oceans? Yes. Interest from investors? Not so much. Ocean Power Technologies didn't quite resonate with IPO investors. |
Popular Mechanics December 15, 2009 Amber Angelle |
New Underwater Explorers Go Where Scientists Can't Engineers have created new ways to do ocean research and solve environmental and biologic problems. |
IEEE Spectrum March 2005 Philip E. Ross |
Waiting and Waiting For the Next Killer Wave A tsunami alarm for the Indian Ocean may be worth the cost, but can it retain public support over the long haul? |
Geotimes September 2004 Jay Chapman |
Hurricanes' Green Thumb As coastal residents are geared up for this year's peak Atlantic hurricane season -- mid-August through October -- scientists are looking at past hurricanes to better understand what happens to the oceans in the wake of these whirlwind events. |
Searcher Nov/Dec 2003 David Mattison |
Information on the Seven Seas: International Ocean Science Web Resources (Part 2) A look at three areas of international cooperation in ocean science research: the physical and chemical ocean, meteorology, and marine life. |
Popular Mechanics August 12, 2008 Laurie J. Schmidt |
Sensor-Laden Super Seals Dive Deep for New Global Warming Data A behemoth marine mammal whose diving skills would put an Olympic athlete to shame has become a surprise player in climate-change studies |
Information Today May 24, 2010 |
World's Largest Oceanography Library Goes Digital Approximately 100,000 volumes from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography Library, the world's largest oceanography library, have been digitized and are being made publicly accessible as part of a partnership between Google, the University of California and the UC San Diego Libraries. |
Science News March 11, 2000 |
Science Safari: Making Waves Office of Naval Research's oceanography Web site |
Geotimes April 2007 Kathryn Hansen |
Ocean Budget Surges Under the fiscal year 2008 budget request, priority ocean projects would receive a budget increase totaling $143 million, countering the otherwise flat budget for earth science. |