Only a small percentage of marine scientists actually study dolphins (we’re not them)
But a much larger percentage still get very excited by seeing them
(We are them)
(🎥 Zac Anderson, BATS technician)
It’s #WorldOceansDay!
It feels a great privilege to be working to understand the incredible thing we call the ocean, especially when you get to do it in beautiful Bermuda
@BIOSstation
After a year of #shark attacks, leaking instruments, and a hiatus resulting from the global COVID-19 pandemic, BIOS’s #gliders are back to work in the waters offshore #Bermuda. https://t.co/7dT6lr0DUI
The BIOS @NSF Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) program was one of the few programs to take place in-person in 2020. Our 8 interns share about their research projects & personal reflections re: their time in Bermuda in our 2020 REU recap. https://t.co/fKwSHBH02w
One of the ULT freezers on the R/V Atlantic Explorer is finding a new use...as storage freezer for #COVID19 vaccines in #Bermuda. Learn more about how BIOS has contributed to the island's ongoing efforts to manage the pandemic. https://t.co/bspuNKRSms
Very cool to see my former lecturer Prof George Wolff @jujuwolff3 on the BBC lunchtime news talking about @eu_atlas project and it’s importance! @LivUni@livunioceansci Go check it out https://t.co/mBi3MyyFX0 😁
As my internship at BIOS ends, its great to see the November issue of Currents featuring myself and the two other UK Associates of BIOS interns!
https://t.co/9n2ojG6jyJ
It's a quick read - detailing our experiences and research at BIOS
#UKAssociatesOfBIOS#gliders#graduate
First week of work at @BIOSstation done!
Deployed one of the gliders (peeking through the window) for some test dives.
Concentrating hard on standing upright and keeping my lunch down 🌊 #oceanscience#UKAssociatesOfBIOS