Item Description
May 3, 2013 Understanding the movement of Fukushima-derived radioactivity through marine ecosystems may come down to getting a better handle on the tiniest of creatures—the microscopic plankton that take up so much volume in the sea. But one species that has become emblematic of the disaster is a shimmering giant: the Pacific bluefin tuna.
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Media Type
Layer Type
Archive
Seeds
Geolocation
41.541, -70.647
Latitude
41.541
Longitude
-70.647
Location
41.541,-70.647
Media Creator Username
KH
Media Creator Realname
KH
Frequency
Archive Once
Scope
One Page
Language
English
Media Date Create
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English Title
Oceanus Magazine - Tale of the Tuna : Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
English Description
May 3, 2013 Understanding the movement of Fukushima-derived radioactivity through marine ecosystems may come down to getting a better handle on the tiniest of creatures—the microscopic plankton that take up so much volume in the sea. But one species that has become emblematic of the disaster is a shimmering giant: the Pacific bluefin tuna.
old_attributes_text
frequency | Once | scope | Page | email | language | English|
Flagged for Internet Archive
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URI
http://wayback.archive-it.org/2438/20110301000000/http://www.whoi.edu/oceanus/feature/tale-of-the-tuna
Attribution URI
http://www.whoi.edu/oceanus/feature/tale-of-the-tuna