Posts Tagged ‘Hydrostation S’
Long-term data show a recent acceleration in chemical and physical changes in the ocean
Two open-ocean hydrographic stations record 40 years of change in the subtropical North Atlantic Ocean
Read MoreThe Sargasso Sea has become warmer and saltier, and the loss of oxygen and ocean acidification is accelerating
The subtropical oceans are getting warmer and saltier, losing oxygen, and gaining carbon dioxide, and in the recent decade, these changes have accelerated.
Read MoreUpper ocean water masses shrinking in changing climate: Less efficient CO2 sink
The oceans help buffer the Earth from climate change by absorbing carbon dioxide and heat at the surface and transporting it to the deep ocean. New research indicates the North Atlantic Subtropical Mode Water, an upper ocean water mass, is shrinking in a changing climate and becoming a less efficient sink for heat and carbon dioxide.
Read MoreThe Ocean Responds to a Warming Planet
New research indicates that upper ocean water masses are shrinking in a changing climate
Read MoreThe Ocean Responds to a Warming Planet
New research indicates that upper ocean water masses are shrinking in a changing climate
Read MoreOceanographic Experience Across the Pond
University of Oxford students spend a week at BIOS learning about oceanography and geology
Read MoreHow Do We Understand the Ocean?
Summer course at BIOS introduces students to the field of observational oceanography
Read MoreBATS Funding Renewed
The ongoing, iconic study at BIOS will continue, with focus on improved modeling and increased collaborations
Read MoreCelebrating 40 Years of the Oceanic Flux Program
Deep in the Sargasso Sea, the OFP continues to track the ocean’s interior
Read MoreOut to Catch a Spring “Bloom”
BIOS gliders team up to monitor phytoplankton growing offshore Bermuda
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