Latest Breaking News On - Arctic exploration - Page 4 : comparemela.com
Rosalind Bailey of Barnet, Vermont. (Photo courtesy of Rosalind Bailey)
KINGSTON, R.I. – April 23, 2021 – Four University of Rhode Island sophomores have been awarded the Ernest F. Hollings Scholarship from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the most prestigious scholarship awarded to undergraduates studying the marine sciences. Since 2005, URI students have won 33 Hollings Scholarships, at least one every year since 2009 and one of the highest totals of any institution in New England.
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Barnet, Vermont; Emily Drappeau, a marine biology and marine affairs major from
Dresden, Maine; Sebastian Murray-Brown, a marine affairs and natural resource economics major from
Gloucester, Massachusetts; and Elizabeth Taylor, an ocean engineering major and business minor from
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There have been many explorers throughout history, and while their exploits and adventures are often well-documented, there are often cracks and lost gaps in their stories. One area where this can be seen quite often is with their ends. Explorers back in older eras would often go missing or turn up dead in the middle of nowhere, with little to tell us of how they spent their desolate final days or moments. These are blanks in history we will never fill, yet sometimes there are interesting hints that turn up. One of these was the diary of a brave Artic explorer who died alone, but left behind a mysterious artifact that faintly illuminated his final hours.
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