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         Oceanographers:     more books (100)
  1. Seeker of Seaways - a Life of Matthew Fontaine Maury, Pioneer Oceanographer by Janice J. (Illustrations By Joseph Cellini) Beaty, 1966
  2. Pioneer Oceanographer by Alexander Agassiz, 1963
  3. Columbus O'Donnell Iselin, Henry Bryant Bigelow Oceanographer, Woods Hole Oceanographic Instititution by Jan Hahn, 1966
  4. Navy oceanographer shuttle observations STS 41-G: Mission report (NUSC technical report) by Paul Scully-Power, 1986
  5. An international list: Submarine geologists and oceanographers by K. O Emery, 1949
  6. Ocean Frontiers, Explorations By Oceanographers On Five Continents by Elisabeth Mann (Ed) BORGESE, 0000
  7. Preliminary results of a geophysical study of portions of the Juan de Fuca Ridge and Blanco Fracture zone: A study performed aboard the USC & GS ship Oceanographer, ... 15-26, 1968 (ESSA technical memorandum) by William G Melson, 1969
  8. Free-air gravity anomalies south of Panama and Costa Rica: (NOAA ship oceanographer - August 1969) (NOAA technical memorandum ERL AOML-14) by Robert J Barday, 1971
  9. Proceedings of the XIII Conference of Baltic Oceanographers, Helsinki, 24.-27. August 1982
  10. Fantastic tidal datums by Ancient Physical Oceanographer, 1988
  11. Adjustment Computations: Spatial Data Analysis by Charles D., Ph.D. Ghilani, Paul R., Ph.D. Wolf, 2006-06-12
  12. Tom Swift & his Diving Seacopter
  13. Underwater exploration: An entry from Thomson Gale's <i>Gale Encyclopedia of Science, 3rd ed.</i> by Gillian S. Holmes, 2004
  14. Eye of the Needle by Ken Follett, 1981-07-02

81. Oceanographers By Age
Number of oceanographers by Employment Sector and Age. 2529, 30-34, 35-39,40-44, 45-49, 50-54, 55-59, 60-64, Total. Academia, 350, 600, 100, 50, -, 50,200, 50, 1,400.
http://www.earthscienceworld.org/careers/stats/oceage.html
Number of Oceanographers by Employment Sector and Age
Total Academia Business / Industry Environmental Other Total Industry Federal Government Environmental Other Total Federal Total Data is from the NSF National Survey of College Graduates, 1993
Data reflects status as of 15 April 1993
- = Insufficient data Return to Career Stats

82. Phenomena, Comment And Notes - Oceanographers Have Discovered A Surprising Possi
Phenomena, Comment and Notes Experiments at sea show we can causephytoplankton to bloom in areas where it otherwise would not.
http://www.smithsonianmag.si.edu/smithsonian/issues96/dec96/phen_dec96.html
document.write(''); Phenomena, Comment and Notes Experiments at sea show we can cause phytoplankton to bloom in areas where it otherwise would not. This could remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and slow global warming A light industrial area on the outskirts of Salinas, California, is probably the last place that you would think to look for an oceanographic institute. Yet, that is exactly where I found the Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, the birthplace of one of the decade's most startling scientific experiments. It was 1987 when oceanographer John Martin at Moss Landing first conceived what has come to be called the "iron hypothesis." Martin, who died in 1993, was a rather extraordinary individual. Working from a wheelchair since a bout with polio, he nonetheless managed on occasion to ship out with his research teams aboard the cramped, overcrowded vessels that are the oceanographer's primary labs. He noted that there are huge areas of ocean (mainly in the waters surrounding Antarctica and in the equatorial Pacific) that have large amounts of nutrients in the form of nitrogen compounds, but very few plankton. These regions also seem to have very low concentrations of iron-on the order of two parts per trillion. Just as lack of a single vitamin or trace mineral can stunt the growth of humans, Martin argued, the dearth of plankton in these otherwise nutrient-rich waters was because of the scarcity of iron. But draw enough carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere, scientists predict, and that temperature will drop. "Give me a half a tanker of iron," Martin once said, "and I'll give you the next ice age." It wasn't all bluster. Scientists now estimate that iron fertilization could, in principle, remove as much as 20 percent of the human-generated carbon dioxide from the atmosphere at a cost less than alternatives such as large-scale tree planting.

83. Investigate Career Options Online
oceanographers. Occupation subdisciplines. Physical oceanographers study theocean tides, waves, currents, temperatures, density, and salinity.
http://www.okcareertech.org/guidance/online_cids/occupation_details.asp?occId=33

84. Oceanographers
oceanographers. JasperGifts.com. Shopping? It s all here! LinksScience Earth Sciences Oceanography oceanographers.
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Oceanographers- More Web Results Below Add Your Site or modify Cousteau, Jacques
Biography of Jacques Cousteau by Rachel Sahlman. Mathieu Benoit, Geochemist A CNRS researcher with interests in: Petrology of mafic and ultramafic rocks, isotopic (Sr, Nd, Pb, Os) and trace element geochemistry; processes of melt extraction, migration and crystallization at Mid-Ocean Ridges or in subduction zones. Michael Latz, Research Biologist

85. OceanPortal : Occupational Outlook Handbook: Geologists, Geophysicists, And Ocea
Occupational Outlook Handbook Geologists, Geophysicists, and oceanographers. Title,Occupational Outlook Handbook Geologists, Geophysicists, and oceanographers.
http://ioc.unesco.org/oceanportal/detail.php?id=2426

86. Oceanographers Say Dead Whales Provide Deep-Sea Living Legacy
NOAA 2000506 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact Jana Goldman 2/17/00.oceanographers SAY DEAD WHALES PROVIDE DEEP-SEA LIVING LEGACY.
http://www.publicaffairs.noaa.gov/releases2000/feb00/noaa00r506.html
NOAA 2000-506
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Jana Goldman
OCEANOGRAPHERS SAY DEAD WHALES PROVIDE DEEP-SEA LIVING LEGACY
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 's National Undersea Research Program and its West Coast and Polar Regions Center at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. Smith, Dan Distel, Amy Baco and other individuals have found that whale bones, along with sunken wood, could be a missing link in the introduction of new species near deep-sea vents, which can reach high temperatures and spew a chemical soup that many organisms find intolerable. The researchers' results will be published in the Feb. 17 issue of the journal Nature Smith and his colleagues are intrigued by the creatures that are attracted to whale corpses. One organism, a big, orange polychaete worm that looks like a furry centipede, can be found in such numbers around whale skeletons that one researcher says it looks like the bones are covered with a orange shag carpet. But scientists have yet to learn how these worms arrive at the carcasses, where they come from, and what their role is in consuming the massive amounts of organic material - often more than 30 tons - found in a whale fall. Smith has studied two natural whale falls and three that were experimentally planted off the coast of southern California. Using a

87. The Good 5 Cent Cigar
URI oceanographers receive grants to study ocean currents, , TheGood 5 Cent Cigar, a newspaper of University of Rhode Island.
http://www.ramcigar.com/news/2004/04/13/News/Uri-Oceanographers.Receive.Grants.T
document.write(''+''); Home News
URI oceanographers receive grants to study ocean currents
By Inga Buchbinder Published: Tuesday, April 13, 2004 04/13/04 - Grants totaling more than $1.1 million were recently awarded to University of Rhode Island researchers at the Graduate School of Oceanography (GSO).
Dr. Vitalii Sheremet and Dr. Peter Cornillon, both physical oceanographers at the Bay Campus in Narragansett will receive nearly $590,000 to study ocean currents off the coast of Nova Scotia. Dr. Dave Hebert of the GSO, who is working with Dr. Miles Sundermeyer of UMass-Dartmouth, will receive almost $570,000 over four years to study how the rotation of the Earth affects ocean currents.
Sheremet and Cornillon's study of the water crossover between Nova Scotia and the Atlantic area known as Georges Bank will help oceanographers to understand why water occasionally shifts course instead of flowing into the Gulf of Maine. Cornillon said if this occurrence happens at the wrong time of the year, it can have negative effects on the rich wildlife in Georges Bank. The goal of the experiment is to understand the physics of the change, which has never been able to be explained.
The team of Hebert and Sundermeyer are working to understand the velocity of the ocean and how the Earth's movement affects it. Cornillon said their main tool is called a rotating table that rotates at a constant rate at one rotation every six seconds. The rotation of the table simulates the rotation of the Earth, which affect tanks of water on top of the table used to simulate oceans.

88. Types Of Oceanographers

http://science.uniserve.edu.au/school/tutes/webtools/hotpot/physocean.htm

89. Types Of Oceanographers

http://science.uniserve.edu.au/school/tutes/webtools/hotpot/bioocean.htm

90. Oceanographers Meet To Map Computer Simulated Models Of Sea Environment
For immediate use, Dec. 30, 1997 No. 951. oceanographers meet to map computersimulated models of sea environment. By KAREN STINNEFORD UNCCH News Services.
http://www.unc.edu/news/newsserv/archives/dec97/oceans.html
NEWS SERVICES
210 Pittsboro Street, Campus Box 6210
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-6210
(919) 962-2091 FAX: (919) 962-2279
www.unc.edu/news/newsserv
NEWS For immediate use Dec. 30, 1997 No. 951 Oceanographers meet to map computer simulated models of sea environment By KAREN STINNEFORD
UNC-CH News Services CHAPEL HILL Oceanographers and environmental scientists from around the world will meet at the North Carolina Supercomputing Center in Research Triangle Park next month to start developing sophisticated computer simulations of the ocean's climate and marine animal populations. The Jan. 15 - 17 workshop underscores the growing need for international cooperation in developing effective, economical controls to protect the ocean's fisheries, said Dr. Francisco Werner, professor of marine sciences at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The workshop is hosted by MCNC's North Carolina Supercomputing Center and UNC-CH and sponsored by Globec, Global Ocean Ecosystem Dynamics, a joint program of the National Science Foundation and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Eventually, Werner said, simulated computerized maps of the ocean could help scientists understand whether decreasing fish populations are being caused by man or are occurring naturally. That knowledge, in turn, could help the world better manage its fisheries.

91. Oceanographers Use Naturally Occurring Radium To Measure Ground Water Input To R
oceanographers use naturally occurring radium to measure groundwater input to Rhode Island salt ponds.
http://www.globaltechnoscan.com/12thDec-18thDec01/radium.htm
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Oceanographers use naturally occurring radium to measure ground water input to Rhode Island salt ponds In a recent study, reported in the Journal of Environmental Radioactivity, Scott and Moran collected and analyzed water samples from Rhode Island salt ponds and several local residential drinking wells, as well as sediment cores from each pond to determine how much 226Ra was present in the water and sediments. The radioactive element radium was discovered in 1898 by Marie and Pierre Curie in pitchblende (or uraninite) from North Bohemia. It is commonly used to make self-luminous paints, as a neutron source, and for the treatment of conditions such as cancer. It is a white alkaline earth metal that tarnishes black upon exposure to air. It luminesces, decomposes in water, emits radioactive radon gas, disintegrates radioactively until it reaches stable lead, and is a radiological hazard. With a half-life of 1,600 years, radium is more than a million times more radioactive than the same mass of uranium ( http://www.webelements.com/

92. URI Biological Oceanographers Test How Shallow Marine Systems Respond To Increas
URI Biological oceanographers Test How Shallow Marine Systems Respondto Increased Nutrients. Most of the efforts to determine how
http://www.globaltechnoscan.com/15thJan-21stJan03/marine_system.htm
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URI Biological Oceanographers Test How Shallow Marine Systems Respond to Increased Nutrients
Most of the efforts to determine how estuaries respond to nutrient enrichment have been confined to relatively deeper and/or muddier river mouth estuaries. However, much of the Atlantic coast from Cape Cod to Cape Fear, as well as parts of the Florida coast and almost all of the Gulf Coast is characterized by a different type of coastal system, called by various names, including lagoon, inland bay, and salt pond. These more complex shallow systems are now facing increasing nutrient enrichment from agriculture and suburban housing development with associated on-site sewage disposal systems and ground water nitrogen enrichment. A team of scientists at the URI Graduate School of Oceanography (GSO) have focused their research on these very shallow lagoon type estuaries to determine if there are predictable patterns of response to nutrient enrichment in these more complex systems. The research team includes biological oceanographer Dr. Scott Nixon, research associates Betty Buckley and Steven Granger, and recent Ph.D. graduate Joanne Bintz. According to a recent article in the journal Human and Ecological Risk Assessment, the scientific team summarized data from 30 systems with mean depths ranging from 1-12 feet and water residence times from .3-100 days. In addition the team designed and built a coastal lagoon mesocosm facility where they replicated and controlled nutrient inputs, mixing rates, and water resident time. Fed by water from Narragansett Bay, the mesocosms had a variety of typical coastal lagoon organisms added to them, in addition to the plankton that enter with the bay water and the animals contained in the sediment.

93. Satellite Oceanography: An Introduction For Oceanographers And Remote-Sensing Sc
Booksearch Satellite Oceanography An Introduction for oceanographers andRemoteSensing Scientists (Wiley-Praxis Series in Remote Sensing).
http://www.booksearch.nu/0471954241
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94. 5.1 Requirements For Operational Oceanographers At The Naval Oceanographic Offic
5.1. Requirements for Operational oceanographers at the Naval Oceanographic Office.James P. Rigney, Naval Oceanographic Office, Stennis Space Center, MS.
http://ams.confex.com/ams/annual2003/techprogram/paper_59079.htm
Coastal Environments Interactive Symposium on Developments in Operational and Research Coastal Oceanography and Meteorology Requirements for Operational Oceanographers at the Naval Oceanographic Office James P. Rigney , Naval Oceanographic Office, Stennis Space Center, MS Session 5, Human Resource Needs, Including Education and Training: Employers' Perspective—USN
2:00 PM, Tuesday, 11 February 2003
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95. 8.2 An Academic Perspective On Educating Operational Oceanographers (2003 - Coas
and Meteorology 8.2. An Academic Perspective on Educating Operationaloceanographers. Mary L. Batteen, NPS, Monterey, CA. The mission
http://ams.confex.com/ams/annual2003/techprogram/paper_59088.htm
Coastal Environments Interactive Symposium on Developments in Operational and Research Coastal Oceanography and Meteorology An Academic Perspective on Educating Operational Oceanographers Mary L. Batteen , NPS, Monterey, CA The mission of our oceanography department is to provide a sound understanding of the science of physical oceanography, and to develop the technical expertise to provide and use oceanographic and acoustic data and models in support of sea operations and undersea warfare. Several curricula have been developed to meet these needs: basic oceanography, operational oceanography, undersea warfare, and a unique joint degree in meteorology and physical oceanography. The department has developed a broad research program focused on basic and operational physical oceanography to meet the anticipated future needs of the Navy. Important basic research themes are the development of the scientific capabilities to measure, analyze and forecast fields of coastal ocean variables that occur in association with synoptic/mesoscale processes over limited regional and temporal domains. The areas of emphasis include coastal and nearshore dynamics, air-sea interaction phenomena and boundary currents. Regions of interest include the coastal ocean regions and strategic seas and straits of the world. Priority applied research areas are the application of analyses and forecasts of upper ocean synoptic/mesoscale variability to Naval operations. Areas of interest include the impact of littoral processes, eddies and boundary currents on ocean surveillance systems, the effect of coastal ocean response to storms on acoustic propagation and ambient noise, and the impact of wave, climate and beach characteristics with nearshore processes and their impact on mine/mine countermeasures and amphibious warfare.

96. Smutraker B Oceanographers Catch First Wave Of Gravity Mission S
July 23, 2003. oceanographers Catch First Wave of Gravity Mission s Success.July 21, 2003. Measuring the Earth s Gravity Field Through GRACE.
http://www.kiwiingenuity.org/smutraker/archives/000479.html

97. Scout Report Archives
Scout Archives Browse Resources. Browse Resources. oceanographers.(1 classification). Classifications. Employment. (1). Andrew W Mellon
http://scout.wisc.edu/Archives/SPT--BrowseResources.php?ParentId=11763

98. Oceanography From The Space Shuttle
Oceanography from the space shuttle This web site, produced by NASA, contains a collection of photographs, taken from the Space Shuttle, that detail oceanographic processes and features ranging
http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://daac.gsfc.nasa.gov/CAMPAIGN_DOCS/OCDST/s

99. Qualification Standards For GS-1360
US Office of Personnel Mgt. United States Office of Personnel Management.Operating Manual. Qualification Standards for General Schedule Positions.
http://www.opm.gov/qualifications/SEC-IV/B/GS1300/1360.HTM
United States Office of Personnel Management
Operating Manual
Qualification Standards for General Schedule Positions
Individual Occupational Requirements for
GS-1360: Oceanography Series
The text below is extracted verbatim from Section IV-B of the Operating Manual for Qualification Standards for General Schedule Positions (p.IV-B-189), but contains minor edits to conform to web-page requirements. Use these individual occupational requirements in conjunction with the "Group Coverage Qualification Standard for Professional and Scientific Positions ." Basic Requirements:
  • Degree: major study of at least 24 semester hours in oceanography or a related discipline such as physics, meteorology, geophysics, mathematics, chemistry, engineering, geology, or biology, plus 20 additional semester hours in any combination of oceanography, physics, geophysics, chemistry, mathematics, meteorology, computer science, and engineering sciences. OR
  • Combination of education and experiencecourse work as shown in A above, plus appropriate experience or additional education. Applicants who qualify on the basis of major study in biology or geology must have had at least 6 semester hours in the major directly concerned with marine science or 6 semester hours in oceanography; applicants who qualify on the basis of other physical sciences or engineering must have had differential and integral calculus and at least 6 semester hours in physics.
  • 100. Havforskerforeningen
    Norske Havforskeres Forening
    http://www.havforsk.no/
    BEKLAGER MEN DIN BROWSER STØTTER IKKE FRAMES!!DU MÅ LASTE NED EN NYERE VERSJON. BEKLAGER MEN DIN BROWSER STØTTER IKKE FRAMES!!DU MÅ LASTE NED EN NYERE VERSJON.

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