Coastal Ocean Institute Highlighted Research |
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Oceanus Magazine
Articles |
November 10, 2005
‘Seasonal Pump’ Moves Water Between Ocean and Aquifers
Seawater is drawn underground in winter and flows into ocean in summer
» View article from Oceanus Magazine
September 1, 2005
An Experiment to Dye For
Researchers trace movement of water using airborne laser
» View article from Oceanus Magazine
August 25, 2005
Anderson Addresses UN Ocean Commission
» View article from Oceanus Magazine
July 15, 2005
Red Tide—Gone for Now, But Back Next Year?
WHOI researchers extend investigations of the Alexandrium
bloom of 2005 and look for signs of future trouble
» View article from Oceanus Magazine
July
11, 2005
The Once and Future Danube River Delta
Past changes in World Heritage site offer lessons for
proposed river projects
» View article from Oceanus Magazine
June 1, 2005
Seeing Red in New England Waters
WHOI researchers detect a massive bloom of algae before it hits the coast
» View article from Oceanus Magazine
September 27, 2005
Nafanua, Eel City, and the Crater of Death
A small but fast-growing volcano appears inside the crater of a mammoth underwater volcano off Samoa
» View article from Oceanus Magazine
January 28, 2005
Robo-Sailors
Navy-sponsored research spawns a new generation of underwater vehicles
» View article from Oceanus Magazine
January 27, 2005
The Cacophony on the Coast
The Navy's deep-ocean acoustic detection methods don't apply in complex shallow waters
» View article from Oceanus Magazine
January 27, 2005
New Instrument Sheds Light on Bioluminescence
A WHOI engineer invents a device to measure a critical but elusive ocean phenomenon
» View article from Oceanus Magazine
January 25, 2005
Where Are Mines Hiding on the Seafloor?
New research reveals how waves, currents, and swirling sands can bury mines
» View article from Oceanus Magazine
January 25, 2005
For the Navy, the Coast Isn't Clear
Oceanographers mobilize to help the Navy operate effectively in complex, shallow waters
» View article from Oceanus Magazine
January 6, 2005
The New Wave of Coastal Ocean Observing
Shore stations and seafloor nodes provide connections for long-term studies of coastal processes
» View article from Oceanus Magazine
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