You are currently browsing the archives for the Uncategorized category.

Ocean pH

Published on: Author: cswauthor

The oceans play a major role in the carbon cycle, storing about 50 times more carbon than the atmosphere. The rise in atmospheric CO2 as a result of human activities (burning fossil fuels, cement production, etc.) has been significantly slowed by the uptake and storage of about a third of this carbon by the oceans.… Continue reading

Nitrogen!

Published on: Author: cswauthor

Nitrogen! This simple element controls so much about life in the ocean and therefore Earth’s climate as a whole. Much of the ocean’s fertility is limited by nitrogen – an essential ingredient for making DNA and proteins – so in in many ways, the availability of this nutrient sets the concentration of greenhouse gases like… Continue reading

Off Catalina Island

Published on: Author: cswauthor
Catalina Island

We’ve headed back a bit more inshore from our deep water station, and are collecting samples to the southwest of Catalina Island (pictured above, illuminated by the light pollution on its other side). The weather has turned cool and rainy, almost like it suddenly remembered it was February, and shouldn’t be warm and sunny all… Continue reading

A (Slightly Late) Valentine’s Day Love Story: Rusalka and MIMSy

Published on: Author: cswauthor

  Prior to the departure of this oceanographic expedition, two (overly-personified) scientific instruments met in the back of a snugly packed minivan as it made the long rush hour trek from L.A. to San Diego to catch the ship. Packed snugly between toolboxes, backpacks, and a (soaking wet) stinky wetsuit, these two beloved pieces of… Continue reading

A Kidnapping

Published on: Author: cswauthor

When Bridget deployed the glider the other day, she left the spare wings in the small boat, and then later she went back and couldn’t find them. Well, yesterday, the note pictured below was found attached to her door. It reads: “if you want the kids back alive (and mostly) unharmed… leave $2.50 by the… Continue reading

Filtering for Microbial Plankton

Published on: Author: cswauthor

Today I filtered seawater from a variety of depths in the upper ocean (from the surface down to 120 meters) to collect marine plankton cells that live throughout the sunlit portion of the ocean. I am interested in microbial activities in the surface ocean because this is where sunlight and atmospheric carbon dioxide are captured… Continue reading