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Gulf Warm-Water Eddies Intensify Hurricane Changes
October 4, 2005 Scientists monitoring ocean heat and circulation in the Gulf of Mexico during Hurricanes Katrina and Rita have a new understanding of how these tropical storms can gain intensity so quickly: The Gulf ... > full story -
UNC Computer, Marine Scientists Collaborate To Predict Flow Of Toxic Waters From Katrina
September 29, 2005 In the immediate wake of Hurricane Katrina, scientists and research centers from across the country came together to generate information on the contaminated floodwaters and offer it to hazardous ... > full story -
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Study Shows Hurricane Katrina Affected 20,000 Physicians, Up To 6,000 May Have Been Displaced
September 28, 2005 Hurricane Katrina and the city-swamping floods that drowned New Orleans and surrounding areas in a toxic gumbo appear to have dislocated up to 5,944 active, patient-care physicians, a new University ... > full story -
Envisat And ERS-2 Reveal Hidden Side Of Hurricane Rita
September 23, 2005 As Hurricane Rita entered the Gulf of Mexico, ESA's Envisat satellite's radar was able to pierce through swirling clouds to directly show how the storm churns the sea surface. This image has then ... > full story -
Rita and Beyond: Research Model Advances Hurricane Intensity Prediction
September 22, 2005 An advanced research weather model run by the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) is following Hurricane Rita to give scientists a taste of how forecast models of the future may predict ... > full story -
NOAA To Study Effects Of Hurricane Katrina; Biologists Will Look At Marine Resources And Contaminants
September 22, 2005 The NOAA Research vessel the Nancy Foster this week is working off the coasts of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama to study the effects of Hurricane Katrina on marine resources and the ecosystem. ... > full story -
NOAA Fisheries Service Rescues The Last Four Trained Dolphins Washed Into Mississippi Sound After Hurricane Katrina
September 22, 2005 The NOAA Fisheries Service and the Marine Life Aquarium of Gulfport, Miss., working with a number of other partners, rescued the last four of the eight trained bottlenose dolphins that were swept out ... > full story -
Ocean Instrument Program Led By Scripps Set To Achieve World Coverage
September 19, 2005 An ambitious idea spawned more than 20 years ago to develop a new way to watch the world change has come to fruition. The Global Drifter Program (GDP), largely led by Scripps Institution of ... > full story -
Believe It Or Not, More Rain Would Benefit New Orleans, Ecologist Says
September 17, 2005 In the wake of Hurricane Katrina -- probably the greatest natural disaster in US history -- a leading ecologist says that one of the best things that could happen to New Orleans and the rest of ... > full story -
UCF Researchers Studying Storm Surge Effects Of Hurricanes On Florida Cities
September 16, 2005 Scott Hagen, an associate professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, and graduate students plan to study the potential effects of storm surges on Florida's east coast, particularly Miami and ... > full story
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