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A song of mostly just fire, how to hide a nuclear submarine, toasty anemones, and more! Monday Morning Salvage: May 20, 2019.

Posted on May 20, 2019 By Andrew Thaler
Weekly Salvage

Flotsam (what we’re obsessed with right now)

  • This tune gives me so much anxiety. Scientist Composes Game of Thrones-Worthy Song From Climate Change Data.
  • Huge if scalable: New plastic closes the recycling loop.
  • Deep in the Ocean’s Trenches, The Legacy of Nuclear Testing Lives: The discovery of “bomb carbon” miles below the surface shows how deep human impact goes.

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

  • For Sea Anemones, Global Warming and Microplastics Have Teamed Up to Make Everything Worse.
  • Wanna Hide a Navy Submarine? Secret Underwater Lairs. Did Washington build them during the Cold War? Of course.
  • This week in mining the deep sea:
    • OPINION: Deep sea marine science is key to unlocking the potential of our oceans by the Secretary-General of the ISA.
    • COUNTERPOINT: Scientists fear impact of deep-sea mining on search for new medicines.
    • CHASER: Underground Robots: How Robotics Is Changing the Mining Industry.
  • Underwater Mountain Range Near California Declared A Mission Blue ‘Hope Spot’.
  • Repeat spawner series: “Winter: the forgotten study season”.
  • Just skating by: Flat sharks deplete as seals return to the North.

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

  • Jimenez and Roberts (2019) Decolonising Neo-Liberal Innovation: Using the Andean Philosophy of ‘Buen Vivir’ to Reimagine Innovation Hubs. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-19115-3_15.
  • Bisconti and friends (2019) A new balaenopterid whale from the late Miocene of the Southern North Sea Basin and the evolution of balaenopterid diversity (Cetacea, Mysticeti). DOI: 10.7717/peerj.6915.
  • Plouviez and friends (2019) Amplicon sequencing of 42 nuclear loci supports directional gene flow between South Pacific populations of a hydrothermal vent limpet. DOI: 10.1002/ece3.5235.
  • Cui and friends (2019) Spatial variations of microbial communities in abyssal and hadal sediments across the Challenger Deep. DOI: 10.7717/peerj.6961.

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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