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         Life On Shore Oceans:     more detail
  1. Ecosystems - Life on an Ocean Shore (Ecosystems) by Stuart A. Kallen, 2003-07-29
  2. A Life on the Ocean Wave and on the Shore by Peter A. Embley, 2002-05-23
  3. A Life on the Ocean Wave and on Shore by Peter A. Embley, 2003-09
  4. Wave-Swept Shore: The Rigors of Life on a Rocky Coast by Mimi A. R. Koehl, 2006-03-07
  5. Harp on the Shore: Thoreau and the Sea by Williard Bonner, 1985-08
  6. Miscellaneous views of California: Stray leaves from the Pacific; life and scenery on the western slopes, from the summtis of the Sierra Nevada to the shores of the Pacific Ocean by Edward Vischer, 1863

21. Oceanography Sites
shorelines, Temperate oceans, and Tropical oceans http//mbgnet.mobot.org/salt/index.htm life on the Rocky shore from ThinkQuest includes tidepool data
http://www.kathimitchell.com/ocean.htm
Oceanography for Kids
General Sites Biomes Sharks and Whales Various Marine Creatures ... Aquariums Online General Sites:
Assorted oceanography lesson plans from Virginia Institute of Marine Science - Bridge
http://www.vims.edu/bridge/lesson.html
Exploring Earth Science from Geocities - see Chapter 6
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Parthenon/9502/earthscience.html
Franklin Institute - Douglas School kids created an ocean webpage
http://www.fi.edu/oceans/oceans.html
Lesson Plans for Teachers from the Franklin Institute
http://www.fi.edu/fellows/fellow8/dec98/teach.html

More Web Resources from the Franklin Institute
http://www.fi.edu/fellows/fellow8/dec98/web.html

Oceans Field Trip with trivia questions and more
http://www.field-trips.org/sci/oceank/index.htm
Oceanography from Mrs. Seagraves' Web Page - oceanography, fish, mollusks etc. http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Atrium/5924/Oceanlifeteacherguide.htm Marine Biology Resources from Mrs. Seagraves' QUEST website http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Atrium/5924/marinebiologylinks.htm

22. Mars Ocean Hypothesis Hits The Shore :: Astrobiology Magazine :: Search For Life
Search for life in the Universe. Mars Ocean Hypothesis Hits the shore To test the hypothesis that oceans once covered much of the northern hemisphere of
http://www.astrobio.net/news/article58.html
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Features Great Debates Table Talk Expeditions Perspectives ... Espanol Hot Topics All Topics Titan Europa Moon to Mars ... Stellar Evolution Image Galleries Studio Panoramas Terrafirma Now Find-It Monthlies Advanced Search Multimedia Search Syndication ... About Ephemerids On this day in... Harvard College in Cambridge, Mass, 1st commencement HMS Beagle sails to Charles Island in Galapagos archipelago Mars Ocean Hypothesis Hits the Shore Summary (Jan 26, 2001): Photographs of the Martian surface find no sign of a sea cliff along a possible ancient shoreline. Display Options: Mars Ocean Hypothesis Hits the Shore To test the hypothesis that oceans once covered much of the northern hemisphere of Mars, scientists at Malin Space Science Systems (MSSS) of San Diego, CA, have used high resolution images of Mars taken with the Mars Orbiter Camera (MOC) on Mars Global Surveyor. "The ocean hypothesis is very important, because the existence of large bodies of liquid water in the Martian past would have had a tremendous impact on ancient Martian climate and implications for the search for evidence of past life on the planet," said Dr. Kenneth Edgett, a staff scientist at MSSS. Features in earlier Mars probes, in particular the startling

23. Irish Wildlife Trust - Education, Awareness, Action
The rich diversity of life we can find in our oceans is the result of hundreds of life on the shore By Irish Wildlife Trust TBC Dependant on tides
http://www.iwt.ie/worldoceansday.php
World Oceans Day!
T-Bay Surf and Wildlife Visitors Centre
Tramore Co. Waterford
Ecological/Environmental Displays
Guided Walks and presentations
Geological Information/walk
Angling International Surfing Competition Ireland Vs Wales
Kite Surfing Display
Surfing Lessons (Booking essential)
Beach Volleyball
Beach Art
Plus Lots, lots more All events free of charge, open to all
World Oceans Day and T-Bay Festival
For the Third successive year we will once more be celebrating World Oceans Day. This year however, as well as a change in the name and location, the event is going to be bigger and better with more for everyone to get involved in. Teaming up with T-Bay Surf and Wildlife Visitors Centre as well as the environmental aspects of the day, there will also be a range of marine related activities including a international surfing competition, surfing lessons, kite surfing demonstrations, beach art and various other activities all free of charge. Table of Contents What is World Oceans Day The National Perspective The Event Irish Wildlife Trust Itinerary ... World Oceans Day Focus on Bio-Diversity
What is World Oceans Day?
The United Nations initiated World Oceans Day after the Rio De Janeiro Earth Summit in 1992. This day was developed to celebrate our marine environment and resources. Twelve years on and the event is still relevant today as it was when it was conceived.

24. Sea Life In Peril: Plankton Vanishing: Usual Seasonal Influx Of Cold Water Isn't
Besides the temperature and salinity of the oceans, the loss of plankton and in nearshore oceanic life, with far fewer fish, birds and marine mammals.
http://www.mindfully.org/Water/2005/Plankton-Vanishing12jul05.htm
Sea Life in Peril
Plankton Vanishing
Usual seasonal influx of cold water isn't happening
GLEN MARTIN / San Francisco Chronicle 12jul2005
Oceanic plankton have largely disappeared from the waters off Northern California, Oregon and Washington, mystifying scientists, stressing fisheries and causing widespread seabird mortality. Mindfully.org note
Besides the temperature and salinity of the oceans, the loss of plankton and sea birds is also due to a wide variety of anthropogenic contaminants — pollutants from human activities.
These include the products and byproducts of all technologies that we take for granted as being safe. Most people do not even give a passing thought to what the products they use on a daily basis are doing to the health of the oceans as well as their own health, which, by the way, are directly connected.
We need the oceans, but they don't need us. In fact, the oceans would be much better off if not for the actions of humans. So don't worry about saving the earth, it's time to think about saving ourselves by saving the earth
Global warming is greatly due to human activates. It is not caused solely by natural events.

25. The Shore Primer - A Cottager S Guide To A Healthy Waterfront
How to Preserve Your shore s True Nature Fisheries and oceans Canada and Cottage life. The Dock Primer is an invaluable guide to waterfrontfriendly
http://www.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/canwaters-eauxcan/infocentre/guidelines-conseils/guides
Français Contact Us Help Search ... Home CANADIAN WATERS Infocentre Alternate Format(s) Document Menu Habitat Management The Shore Primer Table of Contents Publisher Your Shore: A Natural Wonder How to Preserve Your Shore's True Nature ... Infocentre The Shore Primer Previous Page Table of Contents
The Shore Primer
Further Reading
  • The Dock Primer , Max Burns.
    Fisheries and Oceans Canada and Cottage Life.
    The Dock Primer is an invaluable guide to waterfront-friendly docks, covering all the essentials from best building designs to the approvals process. For a copy, contact
    Fisheries and Oceans Canada,
    Referrals Coordinator:
    Phone: (905) 336-4595
    Fax: (905) 336-6285
    E-mail: referralsontario@dfo-mpo.gc.ca
    The Dock Primer is also posted on Cottage Life's Web site (see below). Cottage Life magazine, Cottage Life.
    Published six times a year, Cottage Life is an excellent resource for anyone owning, or renting, residential waterfront property.
    54 St Patrick Street Toronto ON M5T 1V1 Phone: (416) 599-2000 Fax: (416) 599-0800 E-mail: clmag@cottagelife.com

26. The Shore Primer - A Cottager S Guide To A Healthy Waterfront
Fisheries and oceans Canada and Cottage life. and organizations for their assistance in the research of The shore Primer Canadian Museum of Nature;
http://www.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/canwaters-eauxcan/infocentre/guidelines-conseils/guides

27. The Revolutionaries: Sylvia Earle
Just the roar as they came on shore. And then, finally, you came up over the dunes We risk losing our oceans. Then we risk losing life on this planet.
http://www.thetech.org/exhibits/online/revolution/earle/i_a.html
Interview by Jill Wolfson , San Jose Mercury News; and Mariel Haag Senior, Prospect High School Interview photos by Len Lahman , San Jose Mercury News Transcribed by Jean Ricket, Tech Museum volunteer
Mariel Haag Internationally renowned as the ambassador-at-large to the world's oceans, Dr. Sylvia Earle, 61, is the former chief scientist of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, a distinguished marine biologist, a veteran of more than 6,000 hours underwater, leader of the first team of women aquanauts and holder of a depth record for solo deep diving, 1000 meters. Sometimes referred to as "Her Deepness," Dr. Earle is the founder of an ocean engineering firm and is an eloquent spokeswoman for marine conservation. Her 1995 book, "Sea Change: A Message of the Oceans," (Fawcett Columbine) has been described as a Rachel-Carson-like plea for the preservation of the oceans. Her honors include the Explorers Club Lowell Thomas Award and the Director's Award of the National Resources Council. When not underwater, Dr. Earle lives in a home in the Oakland Hills in a wooded setting that she shares with her daughter and a menagerie of cats, dogs, birds and horses. She spoke with writer Jill Wolfson and student Mariel Haag.

28. Monterey Bay Aquarium: About The Aquarium - Press Room Photo Library
Touch pools put visitors close to rocky shore marine life in the oceans Edge wing. Volunteer guides are there to help. © 2005 Monterey Bay Aquarium/Randy
http://www.mbayaq.org/aa/aa_pressroom/photo_results.asp?id=238&active=2&page=0

29. AMAZING WHALES
“life on the Rocky shore is about ocean tidepools. We have many fun activites A page of trivia questions about the world’s oceans and marine life. Good
http://www.atlanticava.org/webandcamsites/ocean.html
Access these sites through your computer’s Internet connection. Open the underlined address (URL). Information can be printed or downloaded to your computer. Be sure to follow links to other sites and find your way back with the “Back” button. Also, we note where we found broken links in our sampling of links within a site. Teachers will need to replace these links with their own. All of the sites listed were active as of March 22, 2005 The evaluation is by the AVA Center staff according to the amount of information given, the general appearance of the site and its potential use in the classroom. This list is also sent through email if you have a school email address. Let us know if you would like to be added to our mailing list. WEBSITES ACADEMY OF ACHIEVEMENT- HALL OF EXPLORERS http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/halls/sci Robert D. Ballard, Ph.D. http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/bal0int-1 Transcript of an interview with noted oceanographer Robert Ballard, discoverer of the Titanic. Includes a Profile and a Biography as well as audio and video clips. Click on Curriculum Center for teacher and student materials.

30. Sea Life In Peril -- Plankton Vanishing / Usual Seasonal Influx Of Cold Water Is
in nearshore oceanic life, with far fewer fish, birds and marine mammals. Last week, Fisheries and oceans Canada the federal agency dealing with
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2005/07/12/MNG8SDMMR01.DTL

31. LIfe On The Edge
Within the confines of the shore, tidal plants and animals have developed Winds howl across the vast oceans which, over time, slowly erode the land as
http://www.sfgate.com/getoutside/1996/jun/edge.html

Index
Fitzgerald Reserve
Spineless and Slimy
Why Tides? ... Splash Zone
Life on the Edge
Oceans cover more than 70% of the earth's surface. Everywhere that the ocean meets the land, a unique and brutal habitat exists. Waves pounding at the rocks constantly reshape the coastline. In this narrow band between water and land, strange animals and plants thrive. Within the confines of the shore, tidal plants and animals have developed specializations which allow them to survive. The tidal zone is continually redesigned by three actions: wind, water and rock. Winds howl across the vast oceans which, over time, slowly erode the land as the waves crash against rocks stirred up by the wave action. Imagine pounding one fist into an open hand over and over again. This is life in the tidepool. When the tide retreats the sun beats down relentlessly. Exposed animals and plants need to conserve water to survive until the tide returns.
Because the tides slowly invade and retreat, distinct sub-habitats exist within the tidepool, each with unique qualities. In the deeper parts of the tidepools, more water is present. Animals and plants that need constant moisture thrive in this zone. Animals and plants that need constant exposure to air live higher in the tidepool, where the waves simply splash. In between, unique critters straddle both worlds, surviving both in the air and underwater. The intertidal zone (the area between high tide and low tide) is rich with nutrients which are replenished by each incoming tide. As the waves crash down, they carry food necessary for survival of the tidepool inhabitants. Each wave carries a plankton soup which is the main diet of mussels and barnacles. Also, dead plants and animals wash into the tidepool feeding the numerous scavengers and opportunists, like hermit crabs, shore crabs, sea gulls and even anemones.

32. Natural Geography In Shore Areas (NaGISA): Project Descriptions: Census Of Marin
The Census of Marine life is a growing global network of researchers in more than and abundance of marine life in the oceans past, present, and future.
http://www.coml.org/descrip/nagisa.htm
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An international collaborative effort to inventory and monitor biodiversity in the narrow inshore zone of the world's oceans at depths of less than 20 meters. Project Leaders Dr. Shirayama Yoshihisa, Seto Marine Biological Laboratory, Kyoto University, Wakayama, Japan
Dr. Brenda Konar, Assistant Professor Marine Science, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Institute of Marine Science, Fairbanks, Alaska, USA Visit the NaGISA web site Wading through a Seagrass bed in Phuket, Thailand, a NaGISA member brings back valuable samples for the lab. Taken by S. Bussarawit, Oct 2004. The Natural Geography In Shore Areas (NaGISA) project is one of seven initial field projects of the Census of Marine Life (CoML). It is a collaborative effort aimed at inventorying and monitoring the biodiversity in the narrow inshore zone of the world's oceans at depths of less than 20 meters, the area people know best and impact most. This is reflected in the Japanese word nagisa, referring to the narrow coastal zone where land meets the sea. NaGISA holds a unique position in the Census of Marine Life as an ambassador project, linking CoML to local interests. It is an exercise in international cooperation and capacity building. OBJECTIVES
NaGISA will complete an equatorial longitudinal gradient from the east coast of Africa to the Palmyra Atoll, and a pole-to-pole latitudinal transect from the northern coast of Alaska to Antarctica's McMurdo Sound. NaGISA employs a simple, cost-efficient and intentionally low-tech sampling protocol that can be adopted by many research groups and countries, and encourage local community involvement. The ultimate goal is a series of well-distributed standard transects from the high intertidal zone to 20 meters water depth around the world, which can be repeated over a 50-year or even greater time frame.

33. Wheel Of Discovery
The wheel of life allows you to determine whether you are focusing too much on one new oceans unless you have the courage to turn away from the shore
http://www.new-oceans.co.uk/new/wheel2.htm

Home

"What if you already had the resources you needed to succeed?"
Is your life in balance? If your career is going strong and your income is soaring but you don't have time to enjoy it, you're probably out of balance. If your hobbies and activities are taking you away from your friends and family, maybe you're life is out of balance. If you are so busy with other things that you're ignoring your health, you probably need a balance adjustment. If you have the house, the car, the boat and the lakeside cabin but no one to enjoy it with, your balance is out of kilter. Have you ever felt like your life was out-of-control? If you have, you probably have a problem with balancing life's priorities. Balance is the type of thing that sounds good in theory but is hard to apply in "real" life. With the constant demands from our work and families, it may be difficult to imagine a life that allows for all the things you would like to do. Many people make the mistake of putting other’s needs ahead of their own. However, this may be a costly mistake in the long run. Burnout, depression, and loss of health are often the price we pay for not making balance a priority in our lives. Perhaps intuitively, great leaders and Successful individuals throughout time have known the importance of having balance in their lives. Instead of living to work, they worked to live. In the process, they became much more well-rounded and balanced in their lives…characteristics which correlate to Success.

34. NEW OCEANS, NLP Life Coaching, NLP Training,NLP
new oceans unless you have the courage to turn away from the shore Join us and put Purpose, Passion and Performance back into your life
http://www.new-oceans.co.uk/new/nowel.htm
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35. How Many Fish In The Sea? Census Of Marine Life Launches First Report
in a massive global scientific collaboration to identify and catalog life in the oceans. While scientists know much about what lives near the shore,
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2003-10/coml-hmf102203.php
Public release date: 23-Oct-2003
E-mail Article

Contact: Terry Collins
collins1@sympatico.ca

Census of Marine Life
How many fish in the sea? Census of Marine Life launches first report
Click here for high-resolution image.
An estimated 5,000 previously unknown ocean fish species and hundreds of thousands of other marine life forms are yet to be discovered, according to scientists engaged in a massive global scientific collaboration to identify and catalog life in the oceans. The new marine fish species, being identified at an average rate of 160 per year (roughly three new species per week since year 2000), are being catalogued and mapped by the Census of Marine Life (CoML), an unprecedented cooperative initiative involving leading marine scientists from every world region. The Census issued its first report after three years of work Oct. 23 at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C. More than 300 scientists from 53 countries are at work on the Census, designed to assess the diversity, distribution and abundance of ocean life and explain how it changes over time. The scientists, their institutions and government agencies are pooling their findings to create a comprehensive and authoritative portrait of life in the oceans today, yesterday and tomorrow. Over 15,300 species of marine fish are now included in the Census database with another 2,000 ¡V 3,000 expected by the time of the final Census report in 2010. CoML experts expect the final count of marine fish species to total roughly 20,000.

36. The Seattle Times: Local News: Warmer Oceans May Be Killing West Coast Marine Li
Warmer oceans may be killing West Coast marine life. By Carina Stanton Upwelling is fueled by northerly winds that sweep out nearshore waters and bring
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2002377292_ocean13m.html
Home delivery Contact us Site map Traffic ... Alerts / E-mails Marketplace Jobs Autos Homes Rentals ... Home delivery Wednesday, July 13, 2005 - Page updated at 09:40 AM Warmer oceans may be killing West Coast marine life By Carina Stanton Seattle Times staff reporter PREV of NEXT JAIME GOMEZ Plankton: Dwindling populations affect other types of marine life. Krill: Shrimplike creatures are an important food source in ocean. E-mail article
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RSS Scientists suspect that rising ocean temperatures and dwindling plankton populations are behind a growing number of seabird deaths, reports of fewer salmon and other anomalies along the West Coast. Upwelling fuels algae and shrimplike krill populations that feed small fish, which provide an important food source for a variety of sea life, from salmon to sea birds and marine mammals. "Something big is going on out there," said Julia Parrish, an associate professor in the School of Aquatic Fisheries and Sciences at the University of Washington. "I'm left with no obvious smoking gun, but birds are a good signal because they feed high up on the food chain." This spring, scientists reported a record number of dead seabirds washed up on beaches along the Pacific Coast, from central California to British Columbia.

37. Sea Life July 2003 Science Explorations Newsletter
Birds are an easy part of shore life to observe. For an online world map that allows you to view all the oceans and other main bodies of water,
http://www.hometrainingtools.com/articles/sea-life-study-science-explorations-ne
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    Sea Life
    Table of Contents
    • Teaching Tips: Along the Shore; Shells; Fish; Sea Animal Defenses Habitat Quick Profile: Kelp Beds Fabulous Facts The Scientific Speaker
    Teaching Tip: Along the Shore Are you taking a trip to the beach this summer? If so, here are ideas on how to use some of that time in a shoreside science study. You can modify your study based on whether your beach is sandy or rocky, as each one offers a different aspect of shore life. For an in-depth study , bring along a magnifying glass (or low-power field microscope), gloves , containers, and a notebook for recording your observations. Use paints, crayons, markers, or colored pencils to combine art with the science lesson and capture some of the color of the seashore. And if you're at a rocky beach, you might want to bring along a small water net for fishing specimens out of tide pools. Using the magnifying glass or low-power microscope

38. Why Is The Ocean Salty?
Sometimes river water travels far from shore before it mixes with sea water. HOW SEA life AFFECTS SEA WATER S COMPOSITION Inasmuch as the oceans
http://www.palomar.edu/oceanography/salty_ocean.htm
Why is the Ocean Salty?
By Herbert Swenson
US Geological Survey Publication
All water, even rain water, contains dissolved chemicals which scientists call "salts." But not all water tastes salty. Water is fresh or salty according to individual judgment, and in making this decision man is more convinced by his sense of taste than by a laboratory test. It is one's taste buds that accept one water and reject another.
A simple experiment illustrates this. Fill three glasses with water from the kitchen faucet. Drink from one and it tastes fresh even though some dissolved salts are naturally present. Add a pinch of table salt to the second, and the water may taste fresh or slightly salty depending on a personal taste threshold and on the amount of salt held in a "pinch." But add a teaspoon of salt to the third and your taste buds vehemently protest that this water is too salty to drink; this glass of water has about the same salt content as a glass of sea water.
Obviously, the ocean, in contrast to the water we use daily, contains unacceptable amounts of dissolved chemicals; it is too salty for human consumption.

39. The WE - State Of Planet - Antarctic Animal, Bird, Moving Life
“A gannett — a sea bird that spends most of its life off shore.” They spend their time in the deep oceans riding the currents of high warmer air.
http://www.thewe.cc/weplanet/poles/antarcti/movinglf.html
Animal, Bird and Sea Life of the Antarctic
Home to an estimated 360 million sea birds, the Antarctic is where more than half the world’s seals live. Whales, dolphin, penguin, fish, sealife, are all a part of the diversity, including a seabed twice as rich and diverse as the Arctic.
On the continent itself, the joke of Antarctica is that the only animals that live year round are less than ¼ of an inch long. The largest permanent land animal is the wingless midge at 12 millimeters in length. Even the midge prefers living on the slightly warmer Antarctic Peninsula, surviving the harsh climate by altering the water content of its blood so that it does not freeze.
There are 100 land invertebrate, 67 species of insects such as aquatic rotifers, eight legged tardigrades, nematode worms, tiny arthropod crabs, and biting and sucking lice. Some Antarctic insects solve the cold problem by losing water and drying out when the temperature drops. Others avoid freezing by producing chemicals in their blood. Some do freeze with ice crystals forming between the cells.
Mites, and black and shiny springtails half the size of a grain of rice, are common around bird and penguin colonies. They jump around attaching themselves to the warm blooded hosts as parasites. Midge and springtail collemola also live under rocks and stones and among lichens. These landed gentry are extremely small; many are microscopic.

40. Who Will Own Deep-sea Life? | Csmonitor.com
The real prospects for bioprospecting in the deep oceans, especially in the Indeed, even inshore prospecting can tax wallets - and local sea life.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0616/p13s01-sten.html
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Before the oil runs out: How US can cope when gas prices surge Sadr militia's new muscle in south Sticking point of voting-reform bid: photo IDs ... Environment from the June 16, 2005 edition ON THE EDGE: Some valuable genes may come from marine life in extreme environments, such as this Pacific vent where temperatures can top 660 degrees F. DUDLEY FOSTER/WOODS HOLE OCEANOGRAPHIC INSTITUTION Who will own deep-sea life? Hard-to-reach marine creatures may be raw material for new products. By Peter N. Spotts Ever since humans' early ancestors first shucked shellfish along the southern coast of France 300,000 years ago, food has been the measure of the bounty of the sea. These days, however, the notion of that bounty is expanding. Increasingly, it includes genetic building blocks cradled in unique deep-sea creatures who thrive under conditions once thought impossible for sustaining life.

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