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  1. Home
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  3. seafloor
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  5. Page 2
Home»Posts tagged with»seafloor (Page 2)

For Pollock Surveys in Alaska, Things Are Looking Up

By Rich Press | NOAA Fisheries on May 22, 2015   At Sea, Featured  

For Pollock Surveys in Alaska, Things Are Looking Up

Shelikof Strait, in the Gulf of Alaska, is an important spawning area for walleye pollock, the target of the largest—and one of the most valuable—fisheries in the nation. This year, a team of NOAA Fisheries scientists went there to turn their usual view of the fishery upside-down. Scientists have been conducting fish surveys in the […]

UNH Geologist Identifies New Source of Methane for Gas Hydrates in Arctic

By Beth Potier | University of New Hampshire on Mar 31, 2015   Featured, Science/Education  

UNH Geologist Identifies New Source of Methane for Gas Hydrates in Arctic

DURHAM, N.H. Research led by a University of New Hampshire professor has identified a new source of methane for gas — hydrates ice-like substances found in sediment that trap methane within the crystal structure of frozen water — in the Arctic Ocean. The findings, published online now in the May 2015 journal Geology, point to […]

Warmer Pacific Ocean Could Release Millions of Tons of Seafloor Methane

By Hannah Hickey | University of Washington News and Information on Dec 18, 2014   At Sea, Featured, Science/Education  

Warmer Pacific Ocean Could Release Millions of Tons of Seafloor Methane

Off the West Coast of the United States, methane gas is trapped in frozen layers below the seafloor. New research from the University of Washington shows that water at intermediate depths is warming enough to cause these carbon deposits to melt, releasing methane into the sediments and surrounding water. Researchers found that water off the […]

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