Six decades ago, pioneering oceanographer and conservationist Sylvia Earle made a bittersweet discovery while diving off Chile’s oceanic islands with the US National Science Foundation vessel, the Anton Bruun. She found the remains of a baby fur seal, one of the world’s most isolated aquatic mammals. Endemic to the Juan Fernández archipelago, in the Pacific Ocean, and once prized for its fur and meat, the species, Arctocephalus philippii , was believed to have been hunted to extinction in the 19th century. But, Earle said: “A baby must have a mum and dad somewhere.” A year after her find, a small
Spring runoff causing funky water with strong chlorine smell in Edmonton
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