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Ramblings from an old scribbler
Joe Gelarden
It is no secret that something is happening out in the Gulf of Maine.
No, I will not dive into the pending political food fight over floating windmills v. fighting fishermen. That is another topic for another time.
We all have seen news reports of how the Gulf is warming and how it might affect the fishing industry and our local lobstermen. We have seen news reports of rising sea levels, usually accompanied by videos of icebergs breaking off arctic glaciers and crashing into the sea. And we all have wondered about the West Coast fires and horrific storms that seem to populate our favorite television news shows on the left and the right.
Full article The Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8 acquired the image below on January 2, 2021
In austral spring and summer, conditions in the South Atlantic off Patagonia often become just right for phytoplankton, and populations of the plant-like organisms explode into enormous blooms.
In late 2020, satellite images started to show the colorful signature of phytoplankton blooms off the coast of Argentina and around the Falkland Islands. Vivid greens and blues still swirled in the sea on January 5, 2021, when the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Terra satellite acquired natural-color images.
The Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8 acquired the image on January 2, 2021. It shows a detailed view of phytoplankton in Grande Bay, off of Argentina’s Santa Cruz province and in part of the Santa Cruz River.
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UC San Diego is preparing to send its famous research ship Roger Revelle on its first trip to Antarctica since the vessel completed a $60 million mid-life overhaul earlier this year.
The ship, which is named for the school’s chief founder, will travel to the Southern Ocean off Antarctica to study the Great Calcite Belt, whose
coccolithophores, or phytoplankton, can reflect light visible from satellites.
The belt sends nutrients to other regions of the world, broadly affecting the productivity of marine life. It also can affect global climate patterns, which will be the primary focus of the two-month expedition that begins on Dec. 26. The expedition will be led by Barney Balch, a UCSD graduate who works at Maine’s Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences.
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