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A drone captured the spectacular caves and arches of A23a in 2023. (Image courtesy of the BBC)
OE-MAR 4_House Keeping_Speakers
arteries of the ocean
spilhause projection
danger Will Robinson
ice shelf loss
Cruzeiro do Sul, approximately 74 miles from Porto Alegre, was one of Rio Grande do Sul’s cities devastated by floods. (Photo by: William Fernando Marx Purper/istock)
Marine snow is organic debris and fecal pellets that clump together to form millimeter-long flakes as they fall through the water column. (Photo ©Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)
medicine bottles
Tara Pacific divers Sylvian Agostini and Pete West sample reefs in the Coral Triangle. (Photo: Tara Ocean Foundation)
Three ships were part of the successful completion of an EPA-approved, small-scale environmental research trial of ocean alkalinity enhancement (OAE) in the Gulf of Maine as part of the LOC-NESS Project. (Photo: Daniel Cojanu, Undercurrent Productions, ©Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)
WHOI Marine Chemists Robert Nelson and Christopher Reddy are being awarded the 2026 Lifetime Scientific Achievement Award by the International Symposium on Comprehensive Multidimensional Chromatography. (Photo by Daniel Cojanu, Undercurrent Productions, ©Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)
The Earth Dynamics Geodetic Explorer (EDGE) satellite is one of two next generation satellites selected by NASA to help better understand Earth and improve capabilities to foresee environmental events and mitigate disasters. (Image by Lanteris Space Systems)
Humpback whales are legendary for their long, haunting songs, which can travel thousands of miles through the ocean. (Photo by Aran Mooney, ©Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)
ocean
Alan Seltzer, an affiliated scientist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), has been named the 2026 recipient of the F.G. Houtermans Award. (Photo courtesy Alan Seltzer)
(Credit: NOAA Fisheries)
Jane Ruckert, a technical diver
Tracking biodiversity and carbon in the ocean requires new ways of measuring a vast, dynamic system. By equipping cargo ships with scientific instruments, researchers can collect regular, in-situ observations of the ocean and atmosphere, helping fill critical gaps in long-term monitoring. (Photo by Taylor Crockford, ©WHOI)
Sediment cores were collected from sites across the North Atlantic, including areas off the Bahamas, Bermuda, North and South Carolina, and Iceland. (Photo by Alice Carter-Champion)
Kate Fligstein (Graphic by Daniel Hentz, © Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)
 This brain coral shows the effects of stony coral tissue loss disease. The brown areas are healthy, the white areas are newly dead from the disease, and the light yellow areas
are dead and colonized by endolithic algae. (Photo by Amy Apprill ©WHOI)
Tatiana Schlossberg
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