Uncovering the Inner Workings of the Oceans
We take a deep dive into the secrets of the ocean with physicist and oceanographer Helen Czerski, and stories about research at the bottom of the sea.
Listen 43:26What comes to mind when you think of the ocean? Maybe a day at the beach — swimming in the waves, snorkeling through coral reefs, fishing, surfing, and sunsets that kiss the blue horizon.
But Earth’s oceans are more than all of that; they’re our planet’s defining feature, its largest ecosystem, the original source of all life, and, according to physicist and oceanographer Helen Czerski, the engine that powers our planet.
On this episode, we talk with Czerski about her new book, “The Blue Machine: How the Ocean Works,” and why she says the ocean is critical not only to our climate system, but to the big and small processes that sustain and shape life on Earth. She also helps us understand the many intricacies of the sea, from the reasons why it’s salty to how the Earth’s rotation affects its currents. We also hear stories about efforts to restore coral reefs using sound, and find out why scientists are looking for climate time capsules at the bottom of the ocean.
ALSO HEARD:
- What can the ocean floor tell us about the past — and future — of our changing climate? A lot — if you ask paleoceanographers. Amy Mayer takes us on board the JOIDES Resolution, a 1970s oil rig-turned-research vessel, as a team of scientists dig for buried answers in the seas off the coast of Portugal.
- We’ll hear an excerpt from the podcast THE WILD with Chris Morgan, where marine biologist Tim Lamont describes his efforts to use sound to restore the health of coral reefs.
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