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Tag: seas
AB Ingredients introduces Two Seas sea salt
2013-03-25 08:00:40| Food Processing
A&B Ingredients Two Seas sea salt is a mineral-rich, low-sodium salt harvested from the Red Sea and the Dead Sea.
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salt
ingredients
introduces
Charting the seas: the Royal Navy's hydrographic heritage
2013-03-20 01:15:00| Naval Technology
The Royal Navy has a rich heritage of hydrography and marine surveying that stretches back to the 17th century with the first survey of the British coast for Charles II. Despite the technological advances of the modern age, the Royal Navy's hydrograp
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heritage
seas
charting
Map plots rising seas street by Jersey street
2013-03-06 15:00:00| Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming Newsfeed
Wall Street Journal: While superstorm Sandy revealed the Northeast's vulnerability, a new map by New Jersey scientists suggests how rising seas could make future storms even worse. The map shows ocean waters surging more than a mile into communities along Raritan Bay, engulfing nearly all of New Jersey's barrier islands and covering northern sections of the New Jersey Turnpike and land surrounding the Port Newark Container Terminal. Such damage could occur under a scenario in which sea levels rise 6 feet--or a...
Tags: map
street
jersey
rising
Shell halts 2013 drilling plans in Alaska's Arctic seas
2013-02-28 10:41:00| Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming Newsfeed
Reuters: Royal Dutch Shell will not drill for oil in Alaska's Arctic seas this year, the company said Wednesday in a widely expected decision that follows a series of high-profile setbacks in 2012. Both critics and supporters of Shell's controversial Arctic offshore foray welcomed its decision to give up on drilling there for 2013 while the company tries to get its drill ships ready and answers to U.S. investigators. Michael LeVine, senior Pacific counsel for environmental group Oceana in Juneau, Alaska,...
The Seas Rise but the Lands Rise Too
2013-02-21 12:31:00| Climate Ark Climate Change & Global Warming Newsfeed
Environmental News Network: As the Arctic ice melts it will raise the sea level. But as it does it removes the enormous weight of the ice and the land will rise too in places, Sophisticated computer modelling has shown how sea-level rise over the coming century could affect some regions far more than others. The model shows that parts of the Pacific will see the highest rates of rise while some polar regions will actually experience falls in relative sea levels due to the ways sea, land and ice interact globally. Reporting...
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