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At Every Depth

Our Growing Knowledge of the Changing Oceans

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

Winner, 2024 Choice Outstanding Academic Title
The world's oceans are changing at a drastic pace. Beneath the waves and along the coasts, climate change and environmental degradation have spurred the most radical transformations in human history. In response, the people who know the ocean most intimately are taking action for the sake of our shared future. Community scientists track species in California tidepools. Researchers dive into the waters around Sydney to replant kelp forests. Scientists and First Nations communities collaborate to restore clam gardens in the Pacific Northwest.
In At Every Depth, the oceanographer Tessa Hill and the science journalist Eric Simons profile these and other efforts to understand and protect marine environments, taking readers to habitats from shallow tidepools to the deep sea. They delve into the many human connections to the ocean—how people live with and make their living from the waters—journeying to places as far-flung as coral reefs, the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, and the Arctic and Antarctic poles. At Every Depth shares the stories of people from all walks of life, including scientists, coastal community members, Indigenous people, shellfish farmers, and fisheries workers. It brings together varied viewpoints, showing how scientists' research and local and Indigenous knowledge can complement each other to inform a more sustainable future. Poignantly written and grounded in science, this book offers a narrative perspective on the changing oceans, letting us see how our relationships to the oceans are changing too.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 11, 2023
      In this unsettling study, Hill, an oceanographer at the University of California Davis, and science writer Simons (Darwin Slept Here) explore ocean ecosystems and how global warming and pollution are affecting them. Explaining how kelp forests, tide pools, and other aquatic environments function, the authors note that coral reefs form from the symbiotic relationship between dinoflagellate algae, which live inside of coral and feed on its “waste nutrients,” and coral itself, which “builds a skeleton out of calcium carbonate,” resulting in “the beautiful structure people are familiar with” that provide shelter to countless fish and other organisms. Underscoring the threat posed by climate change, Hill and Simons report that amphipods (a kind of tiny crustacean) collected from the Mariana Trench were found to be “laden with human-produced polychlorinated biphenyls, chemicals banned for decades,” suggesting even the most remote places on Earth aren’t safe from humans. The authors outline pollution’s toll on the natural world in haunting detail (“In albatross breeding colonies across the Pacific, the large ocean-roaming birds die with stomachs full of plastic, their bodies decomposing until all that remains is a neatly arranged pile of human junk”), providing an incisive look at a world in crisis. This troubling assessment of how humans are devastating the world’s oceans hits home. Illus.

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Languages

  • English

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