Follow our scientific expeditions as teams of scientists and crew aboard the JOIDES Resolution drill deep below the ocean floor to study climate change, geology and earth's history. Learn about the science, hear about ship life, and get the latest updates here!
Science is a process supposed to eliminate all subjectivity so that we can truly understand the nature of the world around us. But science is a process created by people, and carried out by people! How does being at sea for long times affect people emotionally, and how can they overcome this to collaborate to advance science in a truly significant way? Claire speaks to Debbie Thomas, Kevin Grigar, Dan Marone and Ann Dunlea in this final episode of This is Science: Expedition 378.
Dolphins or Dust? What would you choose? Scientists Rosie Sheward and Ann Dunlea talk to Claire about their excitement over the tiny things that can be found in sediment, and what they can tell us about past climate.
'Core on Deck, Core on Deck' a phrase that kicks off a hive of activity on the JOIDES Resolution. Claire talks to JR tech Dan Marone about the choreography of the core flow through the labs, and to scientists Chris Hollis and Ann Dunlea about processing core samples.
Geological time boggles the brain. Millions of years in the past the Earth looked very different than it does today. But the past is in the past, right, why dig it up? Well it might help for the pickle we seem to be getting ourselves in to. We can't run whole Earth climate experiments but we can look back at previous ones to ask questions about what might be to come. Scientists Debbie Thomas and Laura Haynes explain to Claire why Expedition 378 is focusing on the climate during the Paleogene period.
Journeying to a remote area in the South Pacific Ocean to drill into the seabed floor to recover sediments for science - clever idea or crazy idea? What about the idea of drilling to the Earth's Mantle at a time when no proper equipment existed?! In this episode Claire talks to Lindy Newman about the amazing story behind how ocean drilling for science got started.
What happens when you put 118 people on a boat and send them off to the South Pacific Ocean to drill holes in the seabed floor? And what are they doing there in the first place?! New podcast mini series coming soon - This is Science: Expedition 378. Learn about life, science and adventures on the high seas.