How Life Thrives Under the Ocean’s Crushing Pressure
Like most deep-sea biologists, I have a large collection of decorated Styrofoam cups. A couple dozen line the bookshelf of my office, each displaying a…
Deep Sea News’ Friday edition has a new mission – to “restore” small black and white figures from obscure scientific journals to their original color,…
View More Friday Deep-sea Picture: Phakellia sponge (07/24/08)This is an exterior shot of the submersible that collected and photographed the Phakellia sp. sponge from 170 m depth off Florida in the Friday…
View More TGIF Video: Johnson Sea-link SubmersibleIn an alarming trend, the practice of “dynamite” or “bomb” fishing has spread recently to Central America. Reports are coming in that hawksbill turtles are…
View More Fishing with dynamite in El SalvadorNature News reports: “Many of the research projects launched as part of the International Polar Year (IPY), which runs from March 2007 to March 2009,…
View More Rising Fuel Costs Hurt Marine ResearchWe can’t joke around too much about this Hurricane Dolly, I’m afraid. The weather is not terrible here in Corpus, but conditions are rapidly deteriorating…
View More Dolly comes ashore Part 5I am liveblogging Hurricane Dolly from Corpus Christi, Texas. It’s raining here in the Coastal Bend. Not too much wind. Thanks to the storm we…
View More Hurricane stokes tuna consumption, Part 4The second Atlantic hurricane of the year has arrived. Hello Dolly.
View More Hello Dolly, Part 3Clouds can be a sailor’s best friend. Given, you’d have to be an awfully lonely sailor, and probably have to scratch a half dozen unmentionables off the list before you ever got to “clouds”, but, … hey, some modern sailors keep a nice cloud book with them in the navigation room. OK?
View More Clouds in the Hood, Part 2BrianR at Clastic Detritus brought my attention to a new wonderful bathymetric map of the globe. Despite his questionable loyalty to volcanoes, Brian knows a…
View More Global Bathymetry Map