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From oil spills to new species: how tech reveals the ocean The ocean covers nearly three ... sky obscures the stars and confuses terrestrial animals, but what impact does it have on the sea?
Local and international response WWF praises the local organizations and community groups on Mauritius for their ... to bear the burden of lost ocean productivity, clean-up and restoration on their ...
environmental activists and residents of Mauritius were working around the clock Sunday, trying to reduce the damage to the Indian Ocean island from an oil spill after a ship ran aground on a ...
Mauritius Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth said the ship has now stopped leaking oil into the Indian Ocean but the island nation must still prepare for “a worst-case scenario.” ...
At least 40 dolphins have mysteriously died in an area of Mauritius affected by an oil spill from a Japanese ... among scores of the animals that fishermen were trying to herd away from the ...
Around 1,000 tonnes of oil ... of Mauritius when a Japanese-owned ship ran aground on 25 July, causing an environmental emergency. Part of the ship has now been deliberately sunk into the ocean ...
Satellite imagery means large oil spills in the ocean are relatively easily detected ... sky obscures the stars and confuses terrestrial animals, but what impact does it have on the sea?
Show more Show less Machine learning is helping scientists track down hidden oil spills and pollution Vast swathes of ocean – an area ... and confuses terrestrial animals, but what impact ...
The ocean covers nearly three-quarters of our planet but scientists say we have barely scratched the surface of what lives in our seas. But new technologies are helping to change that, revealing ...