NOAA scientists are forecasting this summer’s Gulf of Mexico hypoxic zone or ‘dead zone’.
articles
Small Boat Noise in the Salish Sea Impacts Whale Health
On World Ocean’s Day, marine biologist and coastal geographer Lauren McWhinnie is excited to be part of the festivities at Fisherman’s Wharf and supporting local organization Saturna Island Marine Research and Education Society (SIMRES).
Our Brains Appear Uniquely Tuned for Musical Pitch
In the eternal search for understanding what makes us human, scientists found that our brains are more sensitive to pitch, the harmonic sounds we hear when listening to music, than our evolutionary relative the macaque monkey.
NASA Catches Development of Tropical Cyclone 02A
Visible imagery from NASA’s Terra satellite provided confirmation of the development of Tropical Cyclone 02A in the Arabian Sea, Northern Indian Ocean.
Our Water Cycle Diagrams Give a False Sense of Water Security
Leaving humans out of the picture, the researchers argue, contributes to a basic lack of awareness of how humans relate to water on Earth – and a false sense of security about future availability of this essential and scarce resource.
Experiments Reveal the Physics of Evaporation
It’s a process so fundamental to everyday life — in everything from your morning coffeemaker to the huge power plant that provides its electricity — that it’s often taken for granted: the way a liquid boils away from a hot surface.