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194 results for "ocean trench" — page 2 of 10
ZF_5_12 — Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum: Ancient Anoxic Ocean Crisis
The Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), occurring approximately 55.8 million years ago (latest Paleocene), was one of the most dramatic and rapid climate change events in the Cenozoic, offering the closest geologica
ZF_5_16 — Ocean Observation Networks: Global Monitoring of the Marine Environment
Ocean observation networks constitute the global infrastructure for monitoring the physical, chemical, and biological state of the world's oceans in near-real-time. The centerpiece of modern ocean observation is the Argo
ZF_5_06 — Ocean Energy: Tidal Power, Wave Energy, and OTEC
Ocean energy encompasses a family of renewable energy technologies that harvest the ocean's vast stores of kinetic, thermal, and chemical energy — including tidal power (predictable tidal flow and range), wave energy (wi
ZF_4_08 — Ocean Acidification Paleoclimate Record
Ocean acidification — the decrease in seawater pH caused by absorption of atmospheric CO₂ — is not only a modern phenomenon but has occurred repeatedly throughout Earth's history, leaving distinctive signals in the geolo
ZF_4_17 — Anthropogenic Ocean Noise: Acoustic Pollution and Marine Life
Anthropogenic ocean noise — the introduction of human-generated sound into the marine environment — has increased dramatically since the mid-20th century, transforming the ocean soundscape from one dominated by biologica
ZF_4_11 — Sea Ice Dynamics and Polar Oceanography
Sea ice — frozen seawater that forms a thin crust (typically 1–4 m thick) over polar and subpolar oceans — is one of Earth's most dynamic and climate-sensitive features, playing a disproportionate role in global climate
ZF_4_13 — Ocean Noise Pollution: Anthropogenic Sound and Marine Life
Ocean noise pollution — the introduction of excessive or harmful human-generated sound into the marine environment — has emerged as one of the most pervasive and least visible threats to marine ecosystems. Sound travels
ZF_4_02 — Ocean Pollution and Plastic Debris
Ocean pollution encompasses the introduction of harmful substances and materials into the marine environment, degrading water quality, damaging ecosystems, and threatening human health. The major categories are: plastic
ZF_4_06 — Ocean Remote Sensing and Satellite Oceanography
Satellite oceanography — the use of Earth-orbiting sensors to observe ocean properties from space — has transformed ocean science since the 1970s from a data-sparse field reliant on sparse ship transects to a globally co
ZF_4_10 — Coral as Climate Archive — Paleoceanographic Proxies
Coral paleoclimatology uses the geochemical and physical properties of coral skeletons as high-resolution archives of past ocean conditions — providing some of the most detailed tropical climate records available for the
ZF_4_16 — Microplastics in the Ocean: Sources, Pathways, and Ecological Impact
Microplastics — plastic particles smaller than 5 mm in diameter — have become one of the most pervasive and persistent pollutants in the global ocean. First systematically described as a marine pollutant by Richard Thomp
ZF_4_15 — Ocean Sediments: Deep-Sea Cores, Proxy Records, and Paleoclimate
Ocean sediments are the Earth's most comprehensive climate archive — a continuous record of planetary conditions extending back over 200 million years, slowly accumulated grain by grain on the deep seafloor at rates of m
ZF_4_04 — Ocean Acoustics and Sound Channels
Ocean acoustics — the study of sound propagation in the sea — is fundamental to marine science, military applications, and understanding marine life. Sound travels approximately 4.5× faster in seawater (~1,500 m/s) than
ZF_4_01 — Ocean Acidification and Marine Chemistry
The global ocean has absorbed approximately 30% of anthropogenic CO₂ emissions since the Industrial Revolution and over 90% of excess heat from the enhanced greenhouse effect, making it the planet's primary climate buffe
ZF_1_09 — Thermohaline Circulation and Ocean Conveyor
The thermohaline circulation (THC) — often called the "global ocean conveyor belt" — is the large-scale, density-driven system of deep ocean currents that redistributes heat, salt, carbon, and nutrients throughout the wo
ZF_1_20 — Ocean Stratification
Ocean stratification — the formation of stable density layers in the water column due to gradients in temperature, salinity, and pressure — is one of the most fundamental physical characteristics of the global ocean and
ZF_1_14 — Ocean-Atmosphere Coupling: Heat Exchange, Evaporation, and Weather
The ocean-atmosphere interface — the boundary between Earth's two great fluid envelopes — is the planet's most important energy exchange surface. The ocean absorbs approximately 93% of the excess heat trapped by anthropo
ZF_1_06 — Arctic and Antarctic Ocean Systems
The Arctic and Antarctic ocean systems — the planet's polar marine environments — play disproportionately critical roles in global ocean circulation, climate regulation, and marine biodiversity. The Arctic Ocean (~14.06
ZF_1_01 — Physical Oceanography: Thermohaline Circulation, Currents, and ENSO
Physical oceanography studies the motion, properties, and dynamics of the global ocean — a system containing 97% of Earth's water, covering 71% of the surface, and storing over 90% of the excess heat from anthropogenic c
ZF_1_04 — Ocean-Climate Coupling: Paleoceanography
The ocean is Earth's primary climate regulator — absorbing ~93% of the excess heat trapped by greenhouse gases and ~30% of anthropogenic CO₂, storing 50 times more carbon than the atmosphere, and driving glacial-intergla
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