Podcasts about intertidal

Area of coast exposed only at low tide

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Best podcasts about intertidal

Latest podcast episodes about intertidal

Sound By Nature
162: Gold Bluffs Beach- Low Tide in the Intertidal Zone

Sound By Nature

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2024 110:58


This was recorded in early spring on a mostly cloudy morning at Gold Bluffs Beach in Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park, Humboldt County, California. The wind was light and the ocean surface glassy, and I placed the microphone on a bar of sand and small cobblestones exposed by the low tide, close to the water's edge but beyond the reach of the shorebreak. Do you like the podcast and want to help it get made? You can do just that by making a contribution! Just click one of the following links or the link at the end of this podcast description- ⁠⁠https://soundbynaturepodcast.com/donations/⁠⁠ ⁠⁠https://www.patreon.com/soundbynaturepodcast⁠⁠ If you can't help by making a monetary contribution, that's okay! You can also help by rating and reviewing the show on your favorite podcast platform, or by telling friends about it. I am truly grateful to those of you that support the show monthly through Spotify for Podcasters and Patreon. Your contributions go directly into making these recordings and I deeply appreciate your help. Thank you!!! Thanks to everybody that has rated the show, and especially those of you that have written a review on Apple Podcasts. Your kind words mean a lot! If you'd like to see pictures of the area this was recorded, check out the Instagram or Facebook page for the podcast. Find them by searching @soundbynaturepodcast. You can also see pictures on the podcast website, ⁠⁠⁠Sound By Nature Podcast⁠⁠⁠. Just look for the post for this episode. And while you're there, please consider making a donation! If you have questions or comments, please email me at soundbynaturepodcast@gmail.com I really hope you enjoy this recording. Please do something today and everyday that helps protect the natural world for current and future generations. Thank you very much for listening. Stay healthy, stay safe, stay sound. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/soundbynature/support

Fish of the Week!
Snowflake Moray Eel!

Fish of the Week!

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2023 31:47


Meet a fascinating fish that can swallow its prey on land! From California to Hawaii and beyond, Snowflake Morays are an important player in both the marine and intertidal zones. Dr. Rita Mehta, an evolutionary biologist from the University of California Santa Cruz, is our guest.

Radio Lento podcast
178 Waves of the intertidal zone (Don't forget Lento's built for headphones!)

Radio Lento podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2023 31:27


A shadow grey rock, the size of a stranded ship. Radiating heat, remembered from the midday sun. Around it, rock pools, and smooth curving shapes. Like sleeping seals. You're out. Alone. For a late evening walk. Overhead, and behind, the sky is a deep, deepening blue. An end-of-day blue. But to your right, on the low west horizon, it's still blazing bright.  This place, this wide open beach, is white noise solitude. All around, empty space. Empty space and sea air breezes. Sea air breezes, and some people. Happy cries, and beach ball thumps.  You walk. Scrunch sand between your toes. You swing your legs towards the sea. Head towards the intertidal zone. Stepping on hard ruttled sand. Over furrows of stranded water. For as far as the eye can see. Corrugated land. Low tide land. Shaped into longitudinal lines by the withdrawing waves.  Right ahead, bright white noise. And gulls. Just landed on the wetted sand. Rapidly stamping their little webbed feet, to bring up the morsels. A rush. Of cold fizzing sparkling rippling water. Breaks suddenly over your feet. Breaks, and splashes up your ankles. Stops you in your tracks. Swirls and foams and flattens and shallows, all around you. Fills the air with watery sound. Like shimmering blue, shoreline silk.  Now you're in, and immersed. Ankle deep and paddling. White noise is everywhere. Waves, are everywhere. Racing. Washing over each other. Left to right. Right to left. Face on. And under. Rushing away, behind you. Tiny bubbles. Sparkling. Shallowing. And dissolving, into fizz. Each one, each wave, adding one more corrugation, on the wide intertidal sand.  * This sound photograph of Tenby beach is first try of something new for Lento. We recorded it dynamically, as we walked, in one unbroken 30 minute take. Angling and panning the Lento kit, holding still on wide panoramic views, then panning down almost to touch the water for close-up views of the sparkling bubbles, then gently sliding sideways to chase waves as they race to the shore, as with a film camera. We wanted it to be a kind of sound film. If you can't make it to the beach this month we hope you can enjoy this intertidal sound walk, until you can. 

Dive & Dig
Between Tides and Time: Intertidal Archaeology of the New Forest, England

Dive & Dig

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2023 17:53


Maritime archaeologist, Lauren Tidbury speaks with Garry Momber, Director of the Maritime Archaeology Trust about what they have been discovering in the intertidal zone along the coast of Britain.  This area between high and low water is revealing amazing ancient structures. Learn how during recent work off the New Forest has revealed posts dating back 3000 years to the Bronze Age and others even older – 5,200 years dating to the Neolithic.  Learn how these are being interpreted by mapping their distribution to find out if these might be fish traps, causeways or other structures.  Not only do these sites provide evidence of past land connections to other parts of the world, they help determine early sea levels and are climate change indicators. 

The Essential Rhythm | WERU 89.9 FM Blue Hill, Maine Local News and Public Affairs Archives
The Essential Rhythm 5/21/23: Does rockweed harvest damage intertidal ecosystems?

The Essential Rhythm | WERU 89.9 FM Blue Hill, Maine Local News and Public Affairs Archives

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2023 6:09


Producer/Host: Sarah O’Malley This episode summarizes the findings of Johnston et al (2023) showing that commercial rockweed harvest as practiced in Maine results in on average reduced height but pre harvest levels of biomass one year post harvest. Different implications based on management perspectives are noted.  Johnston, Elliot et al 2023 Bed-scale impact and recovery of a commercially important intertidal seaweed, Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 561:151869 About the host: Sarah O’Malley is an ecologist, naturalist and science communicator passionate about deepening her listeners’ experiences with the natural world. She teaches biology and sustainability at Maine Maritime Academy and is currently collaborating on a guide book to the intertidal zone in the Gulf of Maine. The post The Essential Rhythm 5/21/23: Does rockweed harvest damage intertidal ecosystems? first appeared on WERU 89.9 FM Blue Hill, Maine Local News and Public Affairs Archives.

The Academic Minute
Marcus Carter, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute – Intertidal Objects: A Design Solution for Coastal Erosion

The Academic Minute

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2023 2:30


On Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Week: Coastlines are a battleground in the face of sea level rise. Marcus Carter, assistant professor in the school of architecture, explains why design matters. MARCUS CARTER is an assistant professor at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and a partner at OBJECT TERRITORIES, a critical design practice located in New York and Hong […]

Pomodoro Sessions
INTERTIDAL • Life Between the Tides

Pomodoro Sessions

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2022 30:00


A 25-minute pomodoro background track followed by 5 minutes of silence. For longer play times, open myNoise.net or google myNoise Intertidal and follow the top links.

tides mynoise intertidal
Dugongs And Seadragons
S2E32 – Myriads upon Myriads of Intertidal Scavengers.

Dugongs And Seadragons

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2022 29:02


The makes it to the end of the Dungeon and finds out what has been locked away.   Please support Dugongs & Sea Dragons on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/DugongsAndSeadragons

Cortes Currents
Precolonial Forest Gardens and Orchards

Cortes Currents

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2022 14:14


Roy L Hales/ Cortes Currents - Dr Chelsey Geralda Armstrong is an associate professor from SFU and the lead author of a paper, about the ancient forest gardens in Nuu-chah-nulth territory, published in the Journal of Archaeological Science. While individual species do grow in the wild, forest gardens and orchards exhibit a sophisticated understanding of cultivation and are found adjacent to ancient village sites. In a related study, Armstrong and her colleagues wrote that forest gardens largely disappeared around the time of the smallpox epidemic that swept through B.C's Indigenous communities more than 150 years ago. (In the podcast above, Armstrong mentions three generations of a family that were still transplanting hazelnuts in the 1930s and 40s.) She said it is difficult to say how long the province's Indigenous population were tending forest gardens. Some scientists believe that the Pacific Crabapple (Malus Fusca) is closely related to the Siberian crabapple, and may have been introduced to North America by the first people to cross over from Asia. Armstrong responded, “People have been moving back and forth for millennia.” She calls hazelnuts ‘the Swiss army knife of the plant world.' It is a valuable food source that can be stored year round, a medicine, a dye, and a textile that can be woven or used in boat construction. While not native to the Tsimshian areas, it is found around ancient village sites like Kitselas. The people from that area used a Proto-Salish name for hazelnuts, which originated in southern B.C. 2,000 to 3,000 years ago. She and her colleagues have dug up the 400-year-old remains of hazelnuts, crabapples, Rubus species, and vaccinium species - “all the things that grow in forest gardens” - in Tsimshian territory. They found 600 year-old remains in Coast Salish territory. In the podcast above she talks about using oral histories as a key. Soapberries are native to the interior, but has been found on the central coast. There is an oral tradition that Raven introduced it back in mythic times. “In the case of Nuu-chah-nulth territory, on the west coast of Vancouver Island, we have ethnographic records. Early settlers like Gilbert Sprout, in the 1840s, recorded that ‘natives are as careful of their crab apple orchards as we are of ours.' And so we know that the cultivation of these things, at least predate that,” explained Armstrong. “Nancy Turner, Dana Lepofsky and I recently wrote a paper on transplanting. We conclude that about 15 or 16 plants growing throughout BC are, in many cases, probably the result of ancient transplanting or historical transplanting events.” While she has not specifically studied the Discovery Islands, much of what Armstrong said may be applicable here. She's familiar with Judith Williams book ‘Clam Gardens: Aboriginal Mariculture on Canada's West Coast.' “Clam gardens are showing up everywhere, which of course is a type of mariculture cultivation and so it would make sense that if folks are managing the intertidal in such extensive and long lasting ways that they would be also doing the same with plants.” “Intertidal marsh gardens are another phenomena that have been studied and looked at. Those are a kind of Intertidal/ uppertidal systems of root cropping. Managing the landscape for things like Springbank Clover, Pacific Silverweed, and Wild Rice Root are a lot more common where you guys are. That would be another flag.” Armstrong added, “I want to make sure folks know that it's not like I went out and did this research and discovered forest gardens. These places have been known by Indigenous communities, by folks who lived in the same place, for thousands of years. A lot of the stories that I've been able to put down on paper around forest garden management (come from Indigenous sources). Elders have always talked about old villages being good places to hunt, or good places to harvest. There's this understanding that these places exist.”

Good Morning Portugal!
Embracing WILD Portugal on Good Morning Portugal - Scouting, bush craft & the great outdoors

Good Morning Portugal!

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2022 93:39


Joined for this enthralling episode by our favourite pal in insurance and Scout Leader Nuno Mendes, as well as Miguel from www.intertidal.pt---Expats Portugal are here help you with every aspect of moving to and living in Portugal (-: Join the Expats Portugal community - FREE - here: https://expatsportugal.com/ AND...Support the site and forum (and get discounts and perks) by becoming a Premium Member: https://expatsportugal.com/upgrade/Join this YouTube channel to get access to clips and exclusives:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCONoNEVBaAyCFcY6QpaFvbA/joinSerious about moving to Portugal? Join Expats Portugal's step-by-step, fully supported plan here: https://expatsportugal.com/premium-plus/More about shipping possessions and pets to Portugal with Global in our directory - https://expatsportugal.com/business-directory/global-international-relocation/Mortgages in Portugal: https://mortgagedirectsl.com/For moving large amounts of foreign exchange, consider setting up a free Spartan FX account here: https://expatsportugal.com/business-directory/spartanfx/And for all insurance quotes, try Winsurance here: https://expatsportugal.com/business-directory/winsurance/

The Natural Laboratory
#5: Recovering Black Abalone: Their Roles in Intertidal Ecosystems and in Ours

The Natural Laboratory

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2022 21:55


After Withering Syndrome devastated black abalone populations in Southern California, an interdisciplinary team teamed up to figure out how to save them. Theodora Mautz speaks with a handful of experts on strategies, lessons learned, and next steps for black abalone recovery. In this second episode of a two-part Natural Laboratory podcast series on black abalone, join us as we learn about what happened next to this resilient species, and why we should care.

The Essential Rhythm | WERU 89.9 FM Blue Hill, Maine Local News and Public Affairs Archives
Essential Rhythm 7/22/21: Keeping track of the rocky intertidal

The Essential Rhythm | WERU 89.9 FM Blue Hill, Maine Local News and Public Affairs Archives

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2021 5:46


Producer/Host: Sarah O’Malley In this episode I discuss the science wing of the National Park Service and describe the long term intertidal monitoring project in Acadia National Park that I participate in, including the types of data collected and the way the data could be used for park management. About the host: Sarah O’Malley is an ecologist, naturalist and science communicator passionate about deepening her listeners’ experiences with the natural world. She teaches biology and sustainability at Maine Maritime Academy and is currently collaborating on a guide book to the intertidal zone in the Gulf of Maine. The post Essential Rhythm 7/22/21: Keeping track of the rocky intertidal first appeared on WERU 89.9 FM Blue Hill, Maine Local News and Public Affairs Archives.

WERU 89.9 FM Blue Hill, Maine Local News and Public Affairs Archives
Essential Rhythm 7/22/21: Keeping track of the rocky intertidal

WERU 89.9 FM Blue Hill, Maine Local News and Public Affairs Archives

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2021 5:46


Producer/Host: Sarah O’Malley In this episode I discuss the science wing of the National Park Service and describe the long term intertidal monitoring project in Acadia National Park that I participate in, including the types of data collected and the way the data could be used for park management. About the host: Sarah O’Malley is an ecologist, naturalist and science communicator passionate about deepening her listeners’ experiences with the natural world. She teaches biology and sustainability at Maine Maritime Academy and is currently collaborating on a guide book to the intertidal zone in the Gulf of Maine. The post Essential Rhythm 7/22/21: Keeping track of the rocky intertidal first appeared on WERU 89.9 FM Blue Hill, Maine Local News and Public Affairs Archives.

Cortes Currents
Manson's Lagoon not spared in Marine life die-off

Cortes Currents

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2021 6:16


Anastasia Avvakumova/ CKTZ News - The lagoon at Manson's Landing is yet another location on Cortes, which experienced alarming rates of marine creature die-off in the wake of the recent heat wave — the sand dollar population being hit the hardest, with losses as high as 95 per cent. “My guts tell me, everything I see tells me that climate change is hitting us, and it's just going to speed up. We're going to see more of these events, I am sure of it. And it is going to change things -- it already is.” Deb Cowper is a local marine biologist who led the Manson's Lagoon Gumboot Walk for the third year in a row this past Saturday, July 11. She described the extensive devastation she witnessed, as compared to conditions just two and a half weeks earlier on June 23, when she led another outing at the lagoon for a group of students from the Cortes Island School. “Intertidal critters are some of the toughest beasties going, they have to cope with drying out on a regular basis, they have to deal with lots of temperature changes and … salinity changes, as well as all of us trampling and bringing our boats and so on. So they are a really tough group of critters anyway. But when we were experiencing those extreme temperatures, it wasn't really surprising that we were going to exceed their threshold, their comfort zone.” Cowper reported that “one of the most striking differences was in the sand dollar beds.” On June 23rd, she had noticed a much higher concentration of them than in previous years. Yet sadly on July 11, there were few healthy living specimens left. In her 20 years of studying local intertidal pools, Cowper has never seen anything like this. “Climate change is ... a reality, and it's a crisis.” In her opinion, hope for the future lies in pressuring the government to take action. “It's time you stepped up, and we actually made a difference in Canada and lead the way in the world.” Photo credit: Sand dollar Photo by Jake Beman on Unsplash

The Orca Man Podcast
Ep #5| Trials Tribulations and Lack of Travel in Covid, and Becoming Intertidal Kendy with Kendra Nelson

The Orca Man Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2021 66:43


With this episode you will gain a little insight into the life of Kendra Nelson, the donut layout of the Pacific Northwest, as well as the small trials and tribulations of wanting to move around the PNW during covid. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Mentions: One Ocean Diving https://oneoceandiving.com/ Donuts Lucky's: https://49thcafe.com/ Lee's: https://www.leesdonuts.ca/ Krispy Kreme: https://krispykreme.ca/ ━━━━━━━━━━━━━ Kendra Nelson Instagram: IntertidalKendy https://www.instagram.com/intertidalkendy/ Podcast: Intertidal Talks https://open.spotify.com/show/2kQ74EsYhJYDjSyQbdKdSH?si=btfxX7JwSjefaUcx50UJ4w Marine Bio Movie Club: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCamUuJm__46cFvAJmi-GfYA/featured ━━━━━━━━━━━━━ My Socials

Cascadia Rising Review
"Intertidal" by Timothy Thomas McNeely

Cascadia Rising Review

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 2, 2019 11:02


"Intertidal" by Timothy Thomas McNeely was originally published in Cascadia Rising Review's inaugural issue, released February 14th, 2018. Included analysis done by editors, Lindsay Partain and Trinity Herr. Follow Timothy on Twitter @TTMcNeely Website: ****Follow Us On: Website: CascadiaRisingReview.com Twitter: @cascadia_rising Instagram: cascadiarisingreview

mcneely timothy thomas intertidal
Crustaceans
Crustaceans of Grannis Island

Crustaceans

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2018 18:04


Join us while we learn about the crustaceans that live in the salt marsh surrounding Grannis Island. We will see fiddler crabs and learn about the dangers of the overpopulation of the Purple Marsh Crabs and Asian Green Crabs. We will learn about how the salt marsh grows, and how it provides food, shelter, and space for these interesting creatures.

The Medium Rules: Long-Term Trends in Media and Technology
Longpath: Communicating with our Future Selves with Ari Wallach

The Medium Rules: Long-Term Trends in Media and Technology

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2018 39:45


Notwithstanding the accelerating advance of technology, or possibly because of it, humanity seems to be an “Intertidal” moment whereby the norms, institutions and in many cases the leaders we have long since trusted are in turbulence. There are many reasons for this anxiety, co-existing as it does with mind-boggling technological, economic, and social advancements. “Longpath” is a mindset that is quickly gaining cultural traction as a means of thinking and acting designed to foster connections with one another and with our future selves, allowing us to make the decisions necessary to ensure the human species flourishes and the planet thrives. The Medium Rules host, Alan Baldachin, is joined in the HBA Podcast Studio in New York City by Longpath Labs founder and CEO Ari Wallach to discuss the organization's philosophy, its work, and its ground game for promoting long-term thinking as a decision-making modality. As Ari explains, Longpath Labs is both an incubator and a movement builder dedicated to bringing Longpath thinking to address both humanity's greatest challenges as well as the more mundane day-to-day challenges we face as parents, teachers, coaches, community leaders, business leaders, and social and political activists. Show resources: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tjkrKA1cVdU https://www.longpath.org/ari-wallach Episode Webpage (link to hballp.com/blog) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Grannis Island
Salt Marsh Plants

Grannis Island

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2015 22:05


Come with us to the Grannis Island Salt Marsh on the FarGeorge Preserve in New Haven, CT. You will learn about the incredible salt marsh grasses and the many interesting plants that live in the high and low marsh areas.

Bytemarks Café
Bytemarks Café: ‘OPIHI Intertidal Research

Bytemarks Café

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2015 59:03


Today on Bytemarks Cafe, we'll learn about a citizen science project called Opihi: Our project in Hawaii's Intertidal. We'll find out how secondary school students learn marine ecology conservation and are trained in field methodology and species identification. 5pm on HPR-2.

SPEKTRMODULE
SPEKTRMODULE 40: An Intertidal Gathering

SPEKTRMODULE

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2015 31:13


SPEKTRMODULE 40 An Intertidal Gathering 31 minutes and 12 seconds   This is an ambient / haunted music podcast curated by Warren Ellis, who is a writer from England. I am at @warrenellis / warrenellis@gmail.com Sorry for delay between episodes. Episode 39: 2743 listeners.  Episode 38: 3095 listeners.  Episode 37: 2387 listeners. Please tell other people about this podcast for sleepy people if you like it.  We are #SPEKTRMODULE. It lives at spkmdl.libsyn.com   1.  logotone by Dirty Knobs   2.  "Phantom" -AUN(album: Phantom Ghost - http://aunted.bandcamp.com )   3.  "IMGS /R" -Kara-Lis Coverdale(album: Aftertouches - http://sacredphrases.bandcamp.com )   4.  "Shebeen" -Elisa Luu(album: Enchanting Gaze- http://elisaluu.bandcamp.com )   5.  "A Wake" - High aura'd & Mike Shiflet(album:Awake -  http://highaurad.bandcamp.com )   6.  "Communion (First Light)" -Wizards Tell Lies(EP: Communion - http://simimansound.bandcamp.com )   7.  "As the Stars Shine Over Our Inevitable End" - Dirty Knobs(EP:The Big Klang // As the Stars Shine Over Our Inevitable End - http://zacbentz.bandcamp.com )   8.  logotone  

england awake warren ellis intertidal mike shiflet
Strictlyfishwrap Sciene Radio Hour
SFW 1: Intertidal Ecology and Mussels

Strictlyfishwrap Sciene Radio Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2015 57:34


First recorded show of the live Strictlyfishwrap Science Radio Hour on WRFR-LP in Rockland, Maine on April 5th, 2015. Host: Skylar Bayer Guest: Scott Morello Tracks: The Gammy Bird by Christopher Young, Come and Get your Love by Redbone, Mercy, Mercy, Me (The Ecology) covered by The Strokes, Story Collider track told by Ryan Elizabeth Cope from July 2014 show in Brunswick, Maine.

Everglades Mountains and Valleys

wetlands mangroves gulf of mexico everglades national park bottlenose dolphins intertidal brackish water american crocodile
Places of Environmental Interest

wetlands mangroves gulf of mexico everglades national park bottlenose dolphins intertidal brackish water american crocodile
Bad at Sports
Bad at Sports Episode 222: Ron Terada

Bad at Sports

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2009 64:11


This week Duncan and Christian talk to Ron Terada about art, hockey fights and Blade Runner (for the love of God, Edward James Olmos's character was named Gaff!!!).Ron Terada lives and works in Vancouver. Recent solo exhibitions include Voight-Kampff (2008), Catriona Jeffries Gallery, Vancouver; Stay Away From Lonely Places (2006), Ikon Gallery, Birmingham; and You Have Left the American Sector (2005), ArtGallery of Windsor. His work has been included in a number of group exhibitions including Tractatus Logico-Catalogicus (2008), VOX Centre de l’imageContemporaine, Montreal; Words Fail Me (2007), Museum of Contemporary Art, Detroit; The Show Will Be Open When the Show Will Be Closed (2006)Store, London and the Kadist Foundation, Paris; Intertidal (2005), Museum van Hedendaagse Kunst Antwerpen, Belgium; and General Ideas: Rethinking Conceptual Art 1990-2005 (2005), CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, San Francisco. Terada was a recipient of the Victor Martyn Lynch-Staunton Award, Canada Council for the Arts (2006); and the VIVA Award, Jack and Doris Shadbolt Foundation (2004); and was nominated for a Sobey Art Award (2007). Terada is represented by Catriona Jeffries Gallery, Vancouver.

Ecogeeks : Untamed Science Video Podcast

The Intertidal Zone is the zone from the high tide mark to the low tide mark. Animals must be able to withstand extreme temperature changes and desiccation when they live here. Some intertidal zones are narrow and some are very wide. Learn more as Jonas and Suze head out to explore this aquatic zone.

animals suze biome intertidal us25
KQED Science Video Podcast
Your Photos on QUEST: John Albers-Mead

KQED Science Video Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2008 2:48


Foster City photographer and naturalist John Albers-Mead describes visiting the tide pools near Half Moon Bay as "a treasure hunt that changes by the minute." QUEST joins Albers-Mead on Moss Beach at low tide as he captures these sometimes-sunken treasures with his digital camera.