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Buoys track ocean waves across 14,000 km, from storms in Antarctica to ripples in Alaska
Buoys track ocean waves across 14,000 km, from storms in Antarctica to ripples in Alaska Lisa Lock Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor For the first time, mighty ocean waves generated in the Southern Ocean have been accurately measured all the way to the tiny ripples they form on the shores of Alaska. Professor Ian Young, from the University of Melbourne's Department of Infrastructure Engineering, is lead author on a landmark study that analyzed data from 300 drifting ocean buoys...
Why the Arctic's rivers are rusting now and where toxic orange water could spread next
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Cuts to US ocean programme will hinder monitoring of El Niño and AMOC
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New maps chart old-growth forests across Alaska and British Columbia
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Scientists lose critical climate record as ocean observatory will go dark under Trump funding cuts
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Scientists warning as ocean monitoring network decommissioned under Trump cuts
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Machine learning uncovers 1,750 quakes tracing 250-kilometer edge of Alaska microplate
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August 2026 lunar eclipse: Everything you need to know about the 96% 'blood moon'
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Tump administration to remove 900 deep sea monitoring instruments that would have studied the collapsing Atlantic current
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Mysterious 'cold blob' in the Atlantic is a sign of the Gulf Stream weakening — and that's bad news for the US East Coast
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