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Nathalie Goodkin and Scott Doney with Bermuda brain coral specimen.

Nathalie Goodkin and Scott Doney with Bermuda brain coral specimen.
Nathalie Goodkin and Scott Doney with Bermuda brain coral specimen.
Nathalie Goodkin and Scott Doney with Bermuda brain coral specimen.
Nathalie Goodkin and Scott Doney with Bermuda brain coral specimen.
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73656
Kleindinst, Thomas N.
Nathalie Goodkin and Scott Doney with Bermuda brain coral specimen.
Still Image
08/03/2007
graphics/S_Donney_Nadily_Goodkin/_DSC4646.jpg
Image of The Day caption:
Former MIT-WHOI Joint Program student Nathalie Goodkin and Scott Doney of the Marine Chemistry and Geochemistry department pose with a piece of Bermuda brain coral. Corals accrete seasonal and annual growth layers, similar to tree rings. Because they are slow growing and have long life-spans, corals can provide high resolution temperature records that are well dated and centuries long. Using a 218-year-long temperature record from the coral, Goodkin and colleagues created the first marine-based reconstruction showing the long-term behavior of one of the most important drivers of climate fluctuations in the North Atlantic.
Photo by Tom Kleindinst
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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