By Kevin Zelnio, on  May 24th, 2011 Social Sciences Aegean Sea, Azoic Hypothesis, Best of Zelnio, Charles Darwin, Edward Forbes, GC Wallich, HMS Alexander, HMS Bulldog, HMS Isabella, James Clark Ross, John Ross, Michael Sars, North Atlantic, Northwest Passage, Thomas H. Huxley ←Previous Lesson: Early Paradigms and Exploration Edward Forbes spent his life championing a hypothesis whose evidence was flawed and extrapolations unjustified. The idea of a lifeless deep-sea held sway in a society mystified by the unknown and afraid of what it would hold. Forbes was the scientist-manifestation of this fear and never would concede the . . . → Read More: Deep Sea 101: Forbes’ Folly – Evidence of Deep Sea Life Ignored
By Kevin Zelnio, on  March 24th, 2011 Social Sciences Aegean Sea, Aristotle, Azoic Hypothesis, Best of Zelnio, chlorophyll, currents, deep sea, Dredge, Edward Forbes, exploration, Pliny the Elder, Primary Production, Robert Hooke, Socrates ←Previous Lesson: Lessons from the Census of Marine Life While the Census of Marine Life may be the most recent call to survey the ocean, deep-sea exploration has a rich, paradigm-shifting history. It has all the makings of a Hollywood blockbuster: colorful characters, high seas action, the drama of antagonistic actions between “men of honor”, . . . → Read More: Deep Sea 101: Early Paradigms and Exploration
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