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  5. Page 213
Home»Archives»Science/Education (Page 213)

How this Martian Moon Became the ‘Death Star’

By Nolan O'Brien | Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory on Oct 13, 2016   Featured, Science/Education  

How this Martian Moon Became the ‘Death Star’

  Mars’ largest moon, Phobos, has captured public imagination and been shrouded in mystery for decades. But numerical simulations recently conducted at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) have shed some light on the enigmatic satellite. The dominant feature on the surface of Phobos (22-kilomters across) is Stickney crater (9-km across), a mega crater that spans […]

Exhaling Earth: Scientists Closer to Forecasting Volcanic Eruptions

By Deep Carbon Observatory on Oct 7, 2016   Featured, Science/Education  

Exhaling Earth: Scientists Closer to Forecasting Volcanic Eruptions

  On average, 40 volcanoes on land erupt into the atmosphere each month, while scores of others on the seafloor erupt into the ocean. A new time-lapse animation uniting volcanoes, earthquakes, and gaseous emissions reveals unforgettably the large, rigid plates that make the outermost shell of Earth and suggests the immense heat and energy beneath […]

Mixing New Technology and People Power for an Accurate Count of Endangered Steller Sea Lions

By Katie Doptis | NOAA Fisheries on Oct 3, 2016   Featured, Science/Education, Southwest Alaska  

Mixing New Technology and People Power for an Accurate Count of Endangered Steller Sea Lions

  Fall at the Alaska Fisheries Science Center means researchers are sifting through all the data they collected over the summer months in the field. For the Steller sea lion team that means reviewing hundreds of thousands of photos. Every summer AFSC’s Marine Mammal Lab scientists conduct Steller sea lion surveys along the Aleutian Island […]

Ocean Conditions Contributed to Unprecedented 2015 Toxic Algal Bloom

By Hannah Hickey | University of Washington News and Information on Oct 3, 2016   At Sea, Featured, Science/Education  

Ocean Conditions Contributed to Unprecedented 2015 Toxic Algal Bloom

A study led by researchers at the University of Washington and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration connects the unprecedented West Coast toxic algal bloom of 2015 that closed fisheries from southern California to northern British Columbia to the unusually warm ocean conditions — nicknamed “the blob” — in winter and spring of that year. […]

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