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Phoebe Lam sorting through core sections in the Seafloor Samples Laboratory.

Phoebe Lam sorting through core sections in the Seafloor Samples Laboratory.
Phoebe Lam sorting through core sections in the Seafloor Samples Laboratory.
Phoebe Lam sorting through core sections in the Seafloor Samples Laboratory.
Phoebe Lam sorting through core sections in the Seafloor Samples Laboratory.
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220476
Kostel, Kenneth
Phoebe Lam sorting through core sections in the Seafloor Samples Laboratory.
Still Image
07/01/2013
graphics/Lam_20130701/DSC_8782.JPG
Image Of the Day caption:
WHOI chemist Phoebe Lam retrieves sediment core sample GGC-37, originally extracted by WHOI's Lloyd Keigwin in 1991, from the Seafloor Samples Laboratory. Sediment cores present geological information and are obtained when scientists drill long cylinders into the oceans floor. Samples from the North Pacific Ocean, like GGC-37, indicate an abrupt burst in biological productivity occurred 14,000 years ago. Some attributed this surge in phytoplankton growth to an increase in iron in the ocean. However, this core helped Lam disprove that hypothesis, instead crediting a "perfect storm" of biological factors for providing the optimum conditions for growth.
Photo by Ken Kostel
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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