Feeds Uncategorized Historical Maps and Charts IILSS 26th October 2023 It’s time for a NOAA Ocean Podcast “Science Moment,” where we sample the best segments from our past full-length podcasts. In this episode, learn about NOAA’s historical map and chart collection of more than 35,000 scanned images. Episode permanent link and show notes Post Views: 31 Related posts: Reef Resilience Marine Animal Telemetry Volunteering with our National Marine Sanctuaries GPS on Bench Marks Navigating the Sea is Safer, More Efficient With Digital Charts Geodesy: The Invisible Backbone of Navigation NOAA Custom Chart Tool From Diving to Data: Close-up with Coral Research Marine Debris in Alaska Engineering with Nature: USACE, NOAA, and the Value of Partnership Capturing Snapshots of the U.S. Population Remote Control The Microplastic-Mussel Connection: Part One Recording Oral Histories Digging into the Science of Sand After a Hurricane Hits: NOAA’s Emergency Response Aerial Imagery Ocean Economy Surveying in the Great Lakes Protecting Culebra’s Coral Reefs Education Resources The Exxon Valdez, 25 Years Later Ocean Gliders: How NOAA uses autonomous technology to help predict hurricane intensity Coral Bleaching Understanding Disease Impacts to Long-Spined Sea Urchins Motion in the Ocean: Tides and Currents Great Pacific Garbage Patch Harmful Algal Bloom Forecasting National Ocean Service’s Role in Hurricane Prep, Response, and Recovery NOAA’s Disaster Preparedness Program Marine Debris Movement How Invasive Species Are Introduced Tsunamis Water Level Stations and their Role in Tsunami Detection Alaska: Marine Debris in the Wilderness Microplastics Fa’a Samoa: The Samoan Way (Part One) Dealing with Dead Zones: Hypoxia in the Ocean Turning the Tide: D-Day from an Oceanographer’s Perspective Invasive Lionfish Meteotsunamis: State of the Science