Pamela Hallock, a biogeological oceanographer and distinguished university professor at the University of South Florida ...
Iron is a micronutrient indispensable for life, enabling processes such as respiration, photosynthesis, and DNA synthesis.
Iron carried in clouds of Saharan dust blown across the Atlantic Ocean is increasingly available to tiny life forms the further it travels.
A species of single-celled organisms called foraminifera (forams ... professor at the University of South Florida College of Marine Science, typically finds little comfort in climate change.
A new study published in Frontiers in Marine Science reveals that iron-rich dust from the Sahara Desert becomes more ...
Microbes, after all, play enormously consequential roles in the world around us and within us—I should credit the trillions ...
UCSD's Scripps Institution of Oceanography will receive the four-year grant to study climate change as it relates to brain ...
There has been public backlash against the controversial technique, known as ocean iron fertilisation, in the past.
Twenty years ago, a team of U.K. scientists sounded the alarm on a then-underappreciated problem: the breakdown of plastic ...
Iron contained in Saharan dust, blown across the Atlantic, is beneficial to ocean life and becomes more beneficial, the ...
Growing need for coatings with extended service life and reduced maintenance requirements fuels market demand among fleet ...