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Blending smartphones for science, understanding the environmental hazards of 3D printing, flooding the midwest, and ocean news, too! Monday Morning Salvage: March 25, 2019

Posted on March 25, 2019March 25, 2019 By Andrew Thaler
Weekly Salvage

Foghorn (A Call to Action!)

  • Your regular reminder that the currently proposed 2020 US budget is a crime against the American People. Call your representatives, especially if you live in MD, LA, or NC.
    • U.S. Interior Official Suggests Trump’s Drilling Proposal Will Include Parts of Atlantic.

Flotsam (what we’re obsessed with right now)

  • The destruction of Beira is a catastrophe on a nearly unimaginable scale. ‘Almost Everything Is Destroyed’: Cyclone Idai Leaves Mozambique’s Fourth-Largest City in Ruins.
  • It’s Official, This Is the Oldest Known Mariner’s Astrolabe in the World.
The oldest mariner’s astrolabe ever found, decorated with the Portuguese coat of arms. COURTESY DAVID MEARNS
  • After Two Decades, a Fishy Genetic Mystery Has Been Solved.
  • A scientist faced down the ultimate cold case: How did two groups of fish separately evolve genes for making antifreeze?

Jetsam (what we’re reading from around the web)

  • Deep-sea mining: regulating the unknown.
Venting fumeroles just from the crown of Godzilla hydrothermal vent. Ocean Networks Canada
  • Scientists track damage from controversial deep-sea mining method.
  • Discard Studies’ monthly round up of, well, discard studies. It’s The Dirt!
  • Wounded Wilderness: The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill 30 Years Later.
  • This headline is my brand: Study Shows Rogue Waves Are Becoming More Extreme.
  • Enric Sala: ‘We cannot continue just writing the obituary of the ocean’.
  • More coverage of Dr. McClain’s alligator falls in the Gulf of Mexico: Alligators dropped to darkest Gulf depths to see what bites.
  • The history of our whales and how whaling brought species ‘to brink of extinction’.
  • How is the deep sea so diverse? The struggle is real for late 1900s ecologists.
Small marine animals called macrofauna — snails, worms, clams, and other creatures no bigger than a pencil eraser — live and feed in the seafloor sediment. In an area the size of a coffee table, there may be more than 300 species of macrofauna in deep-sea sediments. Credit: Craig McClain
  • New Climate Change Visualization Presents Two Stark Choices For Our Future.
  • Wounded Wilderness: The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill 30 Years Later.
  • This headline is my brand: Study Shows Rogue Waves Are Becoming More Extreme.
  • Enric Sala: ‘We cannot continue just writing the obituary of the ocean’.
  • More coverage of Dr. McClain’s alligator falls in the Gulf of Mexico: Alligators dropped to darkest Gulf depths to see what bites.
  • The history of our whales and how whaling brought species ‘to brink of extinction’.
  • New Climate Change Visualization Presents Two Stark Choices For Our Future.
Image: Alexander Radtke
  • Whales in the bay: Great for sightseers, but biologists are concerned.
  • Release the Robots! How researchers are studying stressed sharks.
  • Exploding Whales, Poisoned Porpoises: The Gruesome World of Cetacean Autopsies.
  • Bottom trawling may irreparably damage seamount habitats.
  • Dramatic Satellite Photos Show Historic Flooding Across Central U.S. in Wake of Bomb Cyclone.
  • I am always here for new mountains in the sea. Thousands of unknown underwater mountains found in Earth’s oceans.
  • Even more from Discard Studies: Mapping USA electronics manufacturing pollution.
Chemical releases from the computer and electronics sector, 1991-2015. Click here to open the live map. Source: worldingelectronicwaste.xyz
  • Become? Could conservation become locked in a cycle of violence?
  • Wreckage Of World War II-Era Carrier USS Wasp Discovered.
  • These Scientists Ground an iPhone to Dust to Figure Out What’s Inside.

Lagan (what we’re reading from the peer-reviewed literature)

  • Simon‐Lledó and friends (2019) Ecology of a polymetallic nodule occurrence gradient: Implications for deep‐sea mining. DOI: 10.1002/lno.11157.
  • Boesch (2019) Barriers and Bridges in Abating Coastal Eutrophication. DOI :10.3389/fmars.2019.00123.
  • Zhang and friends (2017) Characterization of particle emissions from consumer fused deposition modeling 3D printers. DOI: 10.1080/02786826.2017.1342029.
  • Zhang and friends (2018) Investigating particle emissions and aerosol dynamics from a consumer fused deposition modeling 3D printer with a lognormal moment aerosol model. DOI: 10.1080/02786826.2018.1464115.
  • Liou and friends (2019) Coral-algal interactions at Weizhou Island in the northern South China Sea: variations by taxa and the exacerbating impact of sediments trapped in turf algae. DOI: 10.7717/peerj.6590.

Shipping News (academic and ocean policy wonkery)

  • The longer you sit in a closed conference room with a bunch of people, the worse your decision-making will be. Impaired Decision Making in Conference Rooms.

Feel free to share your own Foghorns, Flotsam, Jetsam, Lagan, Shipping News, Driftwood, and Derelicts in the comments below. If you enjoy Southern Fried Science, consider contributing to our Patreon campaign. For just $5 per month, you can support the SFS Writers Fund, which helps compensate your favorite ocean science and conservation bloggers for their efforts.

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Related

Tags: anti-freeze astrolabe Beira budget deep-sea mining NOAA

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