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Episoden
29.09.2025
6 Minuten
For many people, a personal connection to the ocean ties into
bigger issues like conservation and climate change. As the
biodiversity of marine life along the coast at La Jolla Shores has
declined, divers and researchers discuss why simply knowing about
environmental problems isn’t enough. They emphasize the importance
of conservation psychology, storytelling, and inspiration to
encourage action. This video was created by graduate students in
Marine Biodiversity & Conservation at Scripps Institution
of Oceanography, UC San Diego. [Science] [Show ID: 41072]
Mehr
23.07.2025
48 Minuten
The land we now call Scripps Oceanography has been home to the
Kumeyaay people for thousands of years. A history of encroachment,
colonization and displacement from coastal lands has challenged
Kumeyaay ocean traditions and practices. Today,
Kumeyaay-Iipay-Tipay people are actively revitalizing Indigenous
ocean culture. As part of Perspectives on Ocean Science Lecture
Series, Stan Rodriguez and Priscilla Ortiz Sawah of the Iipay
Nation of Santa Ysabel, and Andrew James Pittman of the Los Coyotes
Band and Cupeño Indians, talk about the history of the Kumeyaay
culture in the region. Through community efforts, they are
rebuilding traditional ha kwaiyo (tule boats), harvesting ha
shupill (grunion) and teaching language about the ocean (ha
silowik). These intergenerational practices embody Indigenous
resilience, resistance and revival — nurturing and evolving
Indigenous ocean knowledge, culture and traditions. Series:
"Jeffrey B. Graham Perspectives on Ocean Science Lecture Series"
[Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 40596]
Mehr
15.07.2025
60 Minuten
It's time for a new narrative for the ocean, one that reflects
current scientific knowledge and acknowledges innovative new
partnerships and solutions that center the ocean in our future. In
this program, Jane Lubchenco, Professor of Marine Biology at Oregon
State University and with expertise in the ocean, climate change,
and interactions between the environment and human well-being,
talks about the two current dominant narratives for the ocean are
anchored in the past. The older one considers the ocean to be so
vast, bountiful, and resilient that it is simply too big to fail.
This first narrative drives pollution and over-exploitation of
resources. A second, more recent narrative is that the ocean is now
so depleted, polluted, and disrupted, and the drivers of those
outcomes are so powerful and complex, that the ocean is simply too
big to fix. A third, new narrative is emerging, based on scientific
findings, existing solutions, and innovative partnerships and
policies. This new narrative acknowledges that the ocean is central
to a safe, clean, healthy, just, and prosperous future. This new
narrative tells us that the ocean is neither too big to fail, nor
is it too big to fix. But it is too important and too central to
our future to ignore. Series: "UC Berkeley Graduate Lectures"
[Public Affairs] [Science] [Show ID: 40427]
Mehr
15.06.2025
52 Minuten
The Birch Aquarium celebrates the incredible contributions of women
in the rich history of marine plankton research at Scripps. Judit
Hersko performs part of her innovative series of visual
narratives, "Pages from the Book of the Unknown Explorer,"
transporting you to Scripps’ early days through a cleverly imagined
correspondence between Dr. Easter Cupp, Scripps' first female Ph.D.
graduate, and a fictitious female explorer inspired by Hersko's
research and field experience in Antarctica. Melissa Carter takes
us on a journey through nearly a century of observations from
Scripps Pier, bringing us to the present day. She provides an
insider’s look at emerging research and observational technologies
used on the pier and explores how these innovations drive new,
groundbreaking discoveries in marine plankton research. Series:
"Jeffrey B. Graham Perspectives on Ocean Science Lecture Series"
[Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 40595]
Mehr
01.06.2025
57 Minuten
Superradiance: Embodying Earth is a multiscreen video and sound
installation by artists Memo Akten and Katie Peyton Hofstader that
serves as a centerpiece of Embodied Pacific: Oceans Unseen. Learn
how collaboration-inspired immersive displays engage us and shape
our understanding and appreciation of the ocean’s unseen mysteries.
The Birch Aquarium hosts this Jeffery B. Graham Perspectives on
Ocean Science Lecture Series for a conversation with the artists as
they describe how they use art to engage us in science, evoking a
visceral and intimate connection to our living planet! Series:
"Jeffrey B. Graham Perspectives on Ocean Science Lecture Series"
[Science] [Show ID: 40593]
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Über diesen Podcast
Guest speakers, researchers and University of California faculty
explore our understanding of research in marine science.
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