Hear That?! New Podcast Highlights Ocean Science
Energy, News, and Climate / Guest Posts

Hear That?! New Podcast Highlights Ocean Science

Looking for another great platform to get your ocean science fix?  Every Tuesday you can catch a brand new episode of my Ocean Allison Podcast, where I interview individuals working to better understand and protect our watery planet.   Much like the creators of this blog site, I am passionate about ocean science communication. I … Continue reading

Megan’s Field Work Musings
Energy / For Fun / How do we science? / Science / Science and Communication / Scientists in Action! / Technology / Travel

Megan’s Field Work Musings

Oceanographic field work has to take place in – you guessed it – the ocean. Most of the time, I sit at my computer and play with Matlab scripts and gigantic stores of data, but every so often one of my fellow Seim lab graduate students (and researcher at the Coastal Studies Institute) Mike Muglia … Continue reading

A Scientist at Sea: California Current Research Cruise (Part I)
How do we science? / Scientists in Action!

A Scientist at Sea: California Current Research Cruise (Part I)

From Kelsey, currently (haha, pun!) on her California Current Cruise- This week, I’m writing to you from someplace other than my little cubicle in the Marine Sciences Dept.—instead, I’m aboard the good ship R/V Melville, currently sailing through the Pacific Ocean! My advisor, another graduate student from my lab (Natalie of Living with Diatoms, Part … Continue reading

Film Friday: “Behind the Scenes” of your local weather report
How do we science? / Podcasts and Videos / Science / Technology

Film Friday: “Behind the Scenes” of your local weather report

Here’s some raw footage of one of National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) buoy deployments last week. This buoy (and one other just to its north) is managed by UNC Chapel Hill’s marine science department. That’s us! NOAA and the National Weather Service (NWS) are government agencies that monitor and research weather, climatological, and environmental … Continue reading

Cetaceans react to sonic exploration
Marine Life / Policy / Science / Technology

Cetaceans react to sonic exploration

This article is in follow-up to Serena’s earlier post about NOAA’s emerging guidelines in marine mammal acoustic protection. As Serena noted, marine mammals, including cetaceans (whales, dolphins, and porpoises), are constantly communicating underwater using sound waves. Humans have also begun to use sound waves underwater to make processes of mapping the ocean floor easier and … Continue reading