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Recent Posts

How close did the world’s first deep-sea mining come to the dredging the world’s largest cold-water coral reef?
March 17, 2026
Here are some ocean conservation technologies that I’m excited about
February 19, 2026
Walking Backwards Into the Future: Applying Indigenous Knowledge to Deep Sea Mining
February 5, 2026
The Urgency Does Not Exist: My statement on Deep-sea Mining to the Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources
January 24, 2026
Bipartisan Concern Expressed Over Deep Sea Mining at Congressional Hearing
January 23, 2026
That’s not a blobfish: Deep Sea Social Media is Flooded by AI Slop
December 19, 2025

Deep-sea Mining: What went down in 2024?

Posted on January 13, 2025January 16, 2025 By Andrew Thaler
Deep-sea Mining: What went down in 2024?
Featured, Policy

The march towards deep-sea mining is a slow and stately trudge through a complex international negotiation. The real progress isn’t made in flashy headlines or overhyped announcements, but in painstaking deliberations and incremental progress in the mining code and the environmental and financial regimes. In as much as 2024 was a fairly standard year in … Read More “Deep-sea Mining: What went down in 2024?” »

Open-source science hardware for an Open Ocean: Reflecting on the Year of the OpenCTD

Posted on January 8, 2025January 8, 2025 By Andrew Thaler
Open-source science hardware for an Open Ocean: Reflecting on the Year of the OpenCTD
Conservation, Education, Featured

At the beginning of 2024, I made a commitment to make it the year of the OpenCTD. A CTD is an oceanographic instrument that measures salinity, temperature, and depth. It is an essential tool in the conduct and marine scientific research. Access to CTDs often present a barrier to communities and knowledge seekers interested in … Read More “Open-source science hardware for an Open Ocean: Reflecting on the Year of the OpenCTD” »

Bringing Ocean Blogging Back! What you read on Southern Fried Science in 2024

Posted on January 5, 2025January 5, 2025 By Andrew Thaler
Bringing Ocean Blogging Back! What you read on Southern Fried Science in 2024
Blogging

After a two and a half year slumber, we brought Southern Fried Science back into the blogging world in a big way. Last year, we published 96 posts, ranging from weird rants about epoxy river tables to long reflections on my reality TV past, to dressing up as a shark and going to a birthday … Read More “Bringing Ocean Blogging Back! What you read on Southern Fried Science in 2024” »

Happy New Year from Southern Fried Science!

Posted on January 1, 2025December 31, 2024 By Andrew Thaler
Happy New Year from Southern Fried Science!
Blogging

It’s January 1, 2025. David Shiffman and I have been writing on this old blog for 17 years To mark the milestone, we’ve decided to switch things up. Today, David Shiffman is writing about conservation and biodiversity in the the deep sea. Today Andrew D Thaler is writing about the perception of sharks in the … Read More “Happy New Year from Southern Fried Science!” »

The wrongest belief about the deep sea is wronger than you know

Posted on January 1, 2025December 31, 2024 By David Shiffman
The wrongest belief about the deep sea is wronger than you know
Blogging, Conservation, Exploration, Featured, Science

More people care about marine biodiversity and saving the ocean than ever before. But progress towards evidence-based conservation is hindered by widespread public misunderstanding of the key issues in play.   You’ve heard versions of this rant from me for 15 years, but this is not a post about sustainable fisheries, or shark conservation. This … Read More “The wrongest belief about the deep sea is wronger than you know” »

How the summer of sharks reshaped our understanding of US presidential elections.

Posted on January 1, 2025January 1, 2025 By Andrew Thaler
How the summer of sharks reshaped our understanding of US presidential elections.
Featured, Policy

The year was 1916, the First World War raged, Woodrow Wilson was in a desperate three-way race for reelection, and sharks were about to experience a shift in public perception that would endure into the next millennium. Prior to 1916, sharks weren’t regarded as particularly dangerous in the United States. A 1915 letter in the … Read More “How the summer of sharks reshaped our understanding of US presidential elections.” »

‘Twas brillig… building a Dungeons & Dragons campaign for adventurers in and out of the classroom.

Posted on December 17, 2024December 17, 2024 By Andrew Thaler
‘Twas brillig… building a Dungeons & Dragons campaign for adventurers in and out of the classroom.
Education, Featured

Earlier this month, I released The Last Hunt for the Jabberwock, a Dungeons & Dragons adventure in ecologic succession. This campaign is an expression of my two favorite things: being giant nerd going on strange journeys with an odd assortment of friends and helping students of all ages learn about their world through experiential education. … Read More “‘Twas brillig… building a Dungeons & Dragons campaign for adventurers in and out of the classroom.” »

Hunt the Jabberwock, Defend the Warren, Save the Forest: a D&D 5e Adventure for Environmental Educators

Posted on December 13, 2024December 17, 2024 By Andrew Thaler
Hunt the Jabberwock, Defend the Warren, Save the Forest: a D&D 5e Adventure for Environmental Educators
Education, Featured

Welcome to the Warren. Within this tiny Domain of Delight, Rabbitfolk engage in an endless battle against the Jabberwock, a manxome foe that refuses to stay dead. With the aid of their Archfey and allies from near and far, they have forged an uneasy peace. Every 30 years the Emerald Moon rises, the Jabberwock returns, … Read More “Hunt the Jabberwock, Defend the Warren, Save the Forest: a D&D 5e Adventure for Environmental Educators” »

Rosalie Bay on the Rumcast and another month of hijinks on Dugongs and Seadragons

Posted on December 10, 2024 By Andrew Thaler
Rosalie Bay on the Rumcast and another month of hijinks on Dugongs and Seadragons
Blogging

Listen to Kernean George, Marcella Harris, and Brett Steigerwaldt on The Rumcast talking about the Rosalie Bay Distillery: Dominica’s First-of-Its-Kind Rum Distillery. Meanwhile, the Cephalosquad seems have largely forgotten that multiple party members are missing and have wandered of to a fancy castle to start an entirely different mission.

Norway pushes pause on plans to mine the deep sea.

Posted on December 2, 2024 By Andrew Thaler
Norway pushes pause on plans to mine the deep sea.
News, Policy

Early this year, the Norwegian parliament approved a bill to open up 300,000 square kilometers of it’s exclusive economic zone to companies exploring the potential for deep-sea mining for  lithium, scandium, cobalt, and other critical minerals. It was a bill allowing the issuing of exploration permits, an important first step towards the commercialization of deep-sea … Read More “Norway pushes pause on plans to mine the deep sea.” »

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