Weekly Ocean News
DATASTREME OCEAN WEEK THREE: 15-19
February 2010
Ocean in the News
- Eye on the tropics ---
Tropical cyclone activity continued across the South
Pacific basin during the past week as Southern Hemisphere summer
continues. Tropical Cyclone Pat formed last weekend over the waters of
the South Pacific Ocean near the Solomon Islands and became a
category-2 cyclone on the Saffir-Simpson Scale by midweek as it
traveled southward. Near the end of the week, Pat dissipated. An image
obtained from the MODIS sensor onboard NASA's Terra satellite shows the
clouds surrounding Tropical Cyclone Pat. [NASA
Earth Observatory]
Late in the week, Tropical Cyclone Rene formed over the South Pacific
and intensified briefly to a major category-3 cyclone over the weekend
as it traveled to the southwest near Fiji. Rene should dissipate early
this week. - Rogue waves cause injuries --
More than a dozen people attending a northern California
surf contest at Mavericks Beach on Half Moon Bay were injured on
Saturday after two rogue ocean waves knocked down spectators. [The
Weather Channel] [CNN
News Video] - Establishment of NOAA Climate
Service is officially proposed --
Early last week, US Commerce Secretary Gary Locke announced
the department's intention to create a NOAA Climate Service line office
that would bring climate research and climate services to a more local
scale. This service would work in partnership with Regional Climate
Offices and State Climate Offices to provide information about climate
change to the public as well as decision-makers, including those with
the US Navy's Task Force Climate Change. [NOAA
News] (Editor's note: The new NOAA Climate
Services as a revised website at http://www.noaa.gov/climate
and a NOAA Climate Portal at http://www.climate.gov/
. EJH) [NOAA
News]
- Next year's NOAA budget proposed by the President
--
At the beginning of February, President Obama released his
proposed Fiscal Year 2011 budget for NOAA, in which he requested $5.6
billion to run the agency and further its commitment to the mission of
protecting lives and property, sustaining the oceanic and atmospheric
environment, continuing scientific research and the promotion of
economic development. Several key items include funding for enhanced
aviation weather forecasts, strengthening of climate science and
climate change research and the support of programs to improve the
nation's coastal environment. [NOAA
News] - USS Macon wreck
placed on historic register --
On the 75th anniversary of the loss of the US Navy airship
USS Macon, a 785-foot dirigible, over the Pacific
off California's Point Sur, NOAA announced that the wreck site within
Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary was placed on the National
Register of Historic Places. The Macon encountered
a storm and sank to a depth of 1500 feet of ocean with the loss of two
out of 83 crewmen as it was returning to Moffett Field from a training
exercise. [NOAA
News] - Status of 82 coral species reviewed
--
Based upon a request from the Center for Biological
Diversity, NOAA’s Fisheries Service recently announced that it will
evaluate the status of 82 species of stony coral to determine if these
should be listed as threatened or endangered under the Endangered
Species Act. [NOAA
News] - Algae bloom seen off Argentina --
A MODIS image obtained last week from NASA's Terra
satellite shows a large phytoplankton bloom in the near surface waters
of the South Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Argentina. [NASA
Earth Observatory] - Submarine volcano
erupts --
A false-color image produced by the Advanced Spaceborne
Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) on NASA’s Terra
satellite shows the ash and steam plumes along with the discolored
ocean waters due to the eruption of the submarine volcano
Fukutoku-Okanoba in the western North Pacific south of the main
Japanese islands earlier this month. [NASA
Earth Observatory] - Ocean waves may have
triggered Antarctic ice shelf collapse --
A team of scientists from Scripps Institution of
Oceanography, Princeton University and the University of Chicago claims
that ocean swell generated by storms over the North Pacific waters
appear to have produced large waves that battered the Antarctic ice
shelves, resulting in their catastrophic collapse. The storm-generated
ocean swell traveled across the Pacific and broke along the along the
Pacific coasts of North and South America. [Scripps
News] - Investigating the impact of mercury
on Arctic snow --
University of Michigan researchers have been tracking the
movement of the chemical element mercury through Arctic ecosystems by a
natural "fingerprinting" process called isotopic fractionation, in
which different isotopes of mercury react to form new compounds at
slightly different rates. They found that the gaseous form of mercury
in the atmosphere is carried by winds over the Arctic basin, where
following oxidation and reaction with bromine, a reactive mercury
compound is deposited onto the snow and sea ice cover. Ultimately, the
mercury becomes ingested into the food chain as methylmercury. [University
of Michigan News Service] - Monitoring
where land meets the sea from space --
A true-color image obtained from the Advanced Land Imager
(ALI) on NASA’s Earth Observing-1 (EO-1) satellite in early January
shows the extent of the urbanization in Karachi, Pakistan’s seaport
city, especially along the coast where ports and pavement mix with then
natural mangroves and river deltas. [NASA
Earth Observatory] - Life near the edge of
the "ocean deep" --
Researchers from the United Kingdom and Japan report that
their analysis of sediments collected from the ocean floor in the
western Pacific's Challenger Deep, the deepest surveyed point in the
world's oceans, indicates evidence of single cell foraminifera living
at depths exceeding ten kilometers below the surface. [EurekAlert!]
- Climate "tipping points" could arrive without
warning --
A ecological forecaster at the University of
California-Davis warns that sudden changes in the Planet Earth's
systems due to changes in climate that would disastrously force the
system beyond what are called "tipping points" could occur with little
warning. One of the tipping points that he envisions would be the
complete disappearance of summertime Arctic sea ice. He bases his
conclusions upon mathematical models that he and a colleague developed
to study natural systems. [University
of California-Davis] - Quaternary sea level
reconstruction models are challenged --
Researchers from the University of Iowa, the University of
South Florida, Spain's Universitat de les Illes Balears and Italy's
University of Rome III are questioning the theories about the rates of
ice accumulation and ablation during the Quaternary Period (the most
recent 2.6 million years). From their research on speleothem
encrustations found in coastal caves on the Mediterranean island of
Mallorca, they found ancient sea levels at approximately 81,000 years
ago were much higher than previously thought, because of rapid ice
melting. [University
of Iowa News Service] - Ancient ocean
chemistry suggests chemically layered waters --
Biogeochemists from the University of California-Riverside,
Washington University in St. Louis, the California Institute of
Technology and the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing have developed
a dynamic three-dimensional model of the planetary ocean chemistry
during the Precambrian's Ediacaran Period (635-551 million years ago)
that indicates the ancient ocean water columns appear to have been
chemically stratified. Oxygen rich waters may have been near the
surface and oxygen deprived iron-dominated deep waters, separated by a
sulfidic water wedge. Their stratified marine basin model aids in
understanding early animal evolution on Earth. [EurekAlert!]
- An All-Hazards Monitor --
This Web portal provides the user information from NOAA on
current environmental events that may pose as hazards such as tropical
weather, drought, floods, marine weather, tsunamis, rip currents,
Harmful Algal Blooms (HABs) and coral bleaching. [NOAAWatch] - Global
and US Hazards/Climate Extremes --
A review and analysis of the global impacts of various
weather-related events, to include drought, floods and storms during
the current month. [NCDC]
- Earthweek --
Diary of the Planet [earthweek.com]
Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader.
Concept of the Week: Sea Water Salinity
and Carbon Dioxide
In view of the contemporary concern regarding global climate
change, scientists are studying the various factors that govern the
ocean's ability to absorb atmospheric carbon dioxide. Concentrations of
atmospheric carbon dioxide are on the rise primarily because of the
burning of fossil fuels (i.e., coal, oil, natural gas). Carbon dioxide
is a greenhouse gas (an atmospheric gas that absorbs and radiates
infrared radiation) so that higher levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide
may be contributing to global warming. The ocean's role in regulating
the concentration of atmospheric carbon dioxide depends on the
temperature, salinity, and biological components of surface waters.
As noted in Chapter 3 of your textbook, gases are more soluble
in cold seawater than warm seawater. Hence, changes in sea surface
temperature affect the ability of the ocean to absorb carbon dioxide.
As noted in Chapter 1 of your textbook, photosynthetic organisms take
up carbon dioxide and release oxygen. And through cellular respiration,
all organisms release carbon dioxide. What about the effects of changes
in salinity on the ocean's uptake of atmospheric carbon dioxide?
Research from the Pacific Ocean near Hawaii provides some insight on
this question.
Since the late 1980s, scientists have been recording ocean
conditions at a site (dubbed ALOHA) about 100 km (62 mi) north of Oahu.
In 2003, David M. Karl, a biogeochemist at the University of Hawaii in
Honolulu, reported a decline in the rate at which surface ocean waters
were absorbing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. In fact, in 2001,
the rate of CO2 uptake was only about 15% of
what it was in 1989. Why the change in CO2
uptake? In this region of the Pacific north of Hawaii, sea surface
temperatures showed no significant change during the period of
observation but precipitation decreased and evaporation increased. Less
precipitation coupled with higher rates of evaporation caused the
surface water salinity at ALOHA to increase by about 1%. Increasing
salinity inhibits water's ability to absorb gases including carbon
dioxide. Karl and his colleagues attribute 40% of the decline in the
ocean's CO2 uptake to the saltier waters. The
balance of the decline may be due to changes in biological productivity
or ocean mixing.
Concept of the Week: Questions
- With rising sea surface temperatures, the rate of
evaporation of sea water [(increases)(decreases)].
- With increasing salinity and constant temperature, the
amount of atmospheric carbon dioxide that is taken up by ocean water [(increases)(decreases)].
Historical Events
- 16 February 1832...The HMS Beagle with
Charles Darwin onboard reached St-Pauls (1ºN, 29ºW).
- 16 February 1993...The Haitian passenger ferry Neptune
sank, sending 1,215 Haitians to their deaths. Coast Guard units
participated in the search and rescue operation but found no survivors.
They then assisted in recovering the bodies of the victims. (USCG
Historian's Office)
- 17 February 1836...The HMS Beagle and
Charles Darwin left Tasmania.
- 17 February 1867...The first ship passed through the Suez
Canal. (Wikipedia)
- 18 February 1828...More than 100 vessels were destroyed in
a storm at Gibraltar.
- 18 February 1846...A General Order was issued by the
Secretary of the US Department of Navy "on Port and Starboard," in
which the term "port" replaced "larboard." (Naval Historical Center)
- 19 February 1473...Nicolaus Copernicus, the father of
modern astronomy, was born in Torun in north central Poland. He was the
first modern European scientist to propose that the Earth and other
planets revolve around the Sun. (The History Channel)
- 19 February 1845...The Lighthouse Establishment was
transferred to the Revenue Marine Bureau. Metal buoys were first put
into service. They were riveted iron barrels that replaced the older
wooden stave construction. (USCG Historian's Office)
- 19 February 1972...A vicious coastal storm dumped 10 to 20
inches of snow over interior sections of the mid-Atlantic and Northeast
states and caused some of the worst coastal damage of the century in
New England. Storm surges up to 4.5 ft and winds gusting over 80 mph
along coastal Rhode Island, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Maine
resulted in extensive property damage and tremendous beach erosion.
Twenty-seven houses were destroyed and 3000 damaged in Massachusetts
alone. (Intellicast)
- 19 February 1977...Using the research submersible Alvin,
deep-ocean researchers John B. Corliss and John M. Elmond found an
extraordinary oasis of life on the Pacific Ocean floor off the
Galapagos Islands, including new types of worms, clams and crabs around
geothermal hot water vents. These organisms appeared to depend upon
bacteria oxidizing hydrogen sulfide contained in the volcanic gases
spewing out of the hot springs. (Today in Science History)
- 20 February 1823...English Captain James Weddell and the
brig Jane reached 74º 15' S, or 940 mi (1520 km)
from the South Pole. His voyage reached farther south than anyone had
ventured until the 1850s, as it was 214 mi south of the latitude that
Captain James Cook had sailed.
- 20 February 1835...While in Chile, Charles Darwin
experienced a strong earthquake and shortly thereafter saw evidence of
uplift in the region. From measurements, he determined that the land
rose several feet, and later hypothesized that coral reefs in the
Pacific could develop along margins of subsiding landmasses. (Today in
Science History)
- 20 February 1856...The John Rutledge,
an American steamer that sailed from Liverpool, England for New York,
hit an iceberg in the North Atlantic. Most of the 155 people onboard
were lost.
- 21 February 1835...The HMS Beagle,
along with Charles Darwin left Valdivia, Chile.
- 21 February 1907...During an exceptionally heavy gale, the
British-owned mail ship Berlin hit dangerous shoals
and broke up while attempting to navigate around the Hook of Holland in
the English Channel. Only 14 on board survived, while 127 were killed
or drowned.
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Ocean Website
Prepared by DS Ocean Central Staff and Edward J. Hopkins,
Ph.D.,
email hopkins@meteor.wisc.edu
© Copyright, 2010, The American Meteorological Society.