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…
It is hard to know where to start in describing Karl Banse, professor emeritus at the University of Washington. He is one of the world’s…
View More A (Not So Serious) Scientific Treatment of MermaidsMuch to the dismay of many of my lab mates, I am unable to do science without some form of musical entertainment. I have even had…
View More Bringin' Shanty BackWhen I crowd funded part of my wood fall research, Immy Smith reached out to me about painting some of the life that occurs on these…
View More Beautiful Wood Fall Art from Immy Smith“ ‘Help!’ cried a bear, ‘I come with bad news!’ ‘Come with me quick, there’s no time to lose!’ The people sailed by and left…
View More On How I Came to Meet Polar Bear PeteThe Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City just announced that it making more than 400,000 digital images of public domain art available on its website free…
View More The ocean and its creatures as artA couple weeks ago this photo was going viral with the headline “A Single Drop of Seawater, Magnified 25 Times”: This was one of this…
View More The sea is full of life, but not quite that fullToo much pressure can be a good thing. Extreme pressure in the earth’s mantle squeezing carbon together creates diamonds and aids Rihanna’s ability to shine…
View More How to shrink a styrofoam cup and other side effects of deep ocean pressureWhen you think of terrifying monsters that might inhabit the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, what do you think of? Mutant sharks? Pissed-off squid? Rabid barnacles? (Well,…
View More The scariest inhabitant of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is not what you thinkMost fauna in the deep-sea rely upon a drizzle of particles of decaying animals and feces. This marine snow is of low food quality as…
View More Dead Elasmobranchs on the Seafloor are Not as Appetizing as One Might AssumeIn 2009, Nereus was the new $5 million hybrid-transformer-multipurpose-all knowing-swiss army knife of deep-sea research from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute. Nereus, primarily funded by NSF (…
View More Nereus confirmed lost