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Calcium in the Carbon Cycle

Calcium in the Carbon Cycle

MIT-WHOI Joint Program graduate student Sara Rosengard measures the amount of calcium in seawater samples using an inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (ICPMS). The amount of calcium helps Rosengard determine…

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Carbon Cycle in Action

Carbon Cycle in Action

Summer Student Fellow Jen Reeve (left) and WHOI marine chemist Amanda Spivak collect sediment samples from an experiment in Spivak’s flow-through seawater system (the white tanks behind them). With water…

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Illustration showing the carbon exchange cycle

In various forms, carbon is continuously exchanged between Earth’s atmosphere, and, and water—an essential cycle for life and regulating the planet’s climate. Atmospheric carbon dioxide readily dissolves in the ocean’s…

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Tracking Salt Marsh Carbon

Tracking Salt Marsh Carbon

WHOI scientists are studying this Waquoit Bay salt marsh to better understand the role wetlands play in storing carbon and exporting it to the coastal ocean. Here, research assistant Kate Morkeski (right)…

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Sensing Carbon Flux

Sensing Carbon Flux

MIT-WHOI Joint Program student Sophie Chu (left) and research assistant Kate Morkeski, who work with chemist Aleck Wang, prepare to deploy a Channelized Optical System (CHANOS) sensor in the Sage…

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Carbon Lock

Carbon Lock

A jar holds a sample of particles collected at 150 meters depth during a cruise along the West Antarctic Peninsula. These particles—mostly krill fecal pellets and collections of diatoms—are an important component…

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Carbon Capture

Carbon Capture

MIT-WHOI Joint Program student Sarah Rosengard converts organic carbon to carbon dioxide by slowly increasing its temperature from room temperature to 800°C (1,470°F) at WHOI’s National Ocean Sciences Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (NOSAMS)…

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Of Carbon and Rivers

Of Carbon and Rivers

Scientists involved in the Global Rivers Observatory are studying Earth’s major river systems to understand what they transport to the ocean and how river chemistry reflects environmental change in their…

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Carbon on the Move

Carbon on the Move

Carbon makes the world go around. It is the building block of life on Earth, and in the form of carbon dioxide gas in the atmosphere, it has a powerful…

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Carbon on Ice

Carbon on Ice

A team of researchers sample ice and snow from an ice floe in the Canada Basin, an area northwest of the Canadian coast, during a 2008 expedition to measure carbon…

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Carousel of Carbon

Carousel of Carbon

Round and round goes carbon around our planet. At the same time, figuratively, carbon makes the world go ’round. The element is the building block of life on Earth and,…

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Catching Carbon

Catching Carbon

Deploying a sediment trap from R/V Oceanus in the Gulf of Maine.  The instrument collects sinking particles on a pre-programmed schedule and measures the export of carbon and other geochemical…

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An undersea profiling robot

Sea-going robots can travel on their own for weeks at a time, gathering critical information that helps us understand things like the ocean’s carbon cycle. But despite their considerable powers,…

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Mighty Mites

Mighty Mites

Under a microscope, a copepod looks fearsome, but at only one-sixteenth of an inch, it won’t bother anyone. People seldom see these tiny marine crustaceans, but they may be the…

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Along for the Ride

Along for the Ride

A CTD instrument is a standard workhorse of oceanography, measuring conductivity (salinity), temperature, and depth as it descends through the water. But this CTD has a special “passenger” attached to…

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Export Expert

Export Expert

Marine chemist Ken Buesseler (right) deployed a sediment trap from the research vessel  Roger Revelle in the fall of 2018 during the EXPORTS expedition in the Gulf of Alaska. EXPORTS (Export Processes…

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Precision Testing

Precision Testing

WHOI marine chemist Aleck Wang and his research team are developing a new instrument to measure two key factors in the global carbon cycle that helps regulate Earth’s climate. The…

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First Time Out

First Time Out

Postdoctoral investigator Eyal Wurgaft, research assistant Kate Morkeski, and MIT-WHOI Joint Program graduate student Mallory Ringham (left to right) lower the new Channelized Optical System (CHANOS II) instrument into Eel Pond…

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After the Thaw

After the Thaw

WHOI research engineer Kevin Manganini launches “ChemYak,” a variation of the remote-controlled surface vehicle known as JetYak developed by WHOI to collect data in shallow water or difficult conditions. ChemYak…

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