Explorez tous les épisodes du podcast Oceanus
| Titre | Date | Durée | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Making Waves: Tuning our ears to the ocean | 08 Jan 2026 | 00:08:29 | |
The ocean is brimming with sounds, from the crackle of snapping shrimp to the deep bellows of humpback whales. Amelia Macapia, a WHOI guest investigator and a contributor for Oceanus Magazine, explains how studying acoustic ecology led her to fall into a deep love with the sea. She tells her story in front of a live audience in Woods Hole for "Making Waves: A Science Story Slam," the culmination of a first-of-its-kind science storytelling workshop hosted by the Transom Story Lab and Atlantic Public Media in June 2025. (Original photo by Liz Lerner, Artwork by Daniel Hentz) | |||
| Gold mining's toxic legacy | 12 Nov 2025 | 00:07:38 | |
A WHOI marine chemist studies how mercury pollution in Colombia’s Amazon threatens the Indigenous way of life. Story written and narrated by Rachel Mann. Read the full story at https://go.whoi.edu/toxicgoldmining | |||
| An Antarctic Bestiary - Part 3. Emperor Penguins | 27 Mar 2025 | 00:07:14 | |
Don't let their awkward waddle fool you. Emperor penguins have evolved ingenious ways to stay warm, feed their young, and forage in deep water, all while living in the world's most inhospitable continent. Find out how these iconic sea birds earned their royal reputation. Written and narrated by Elise Hugus | Artwork by Natalie Renier, © Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Penguin soundbites are from video footage Courtesy of Stephanie Jenouvrier, © Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution | |||
| An Antarctic Bestiary - Part 2. Weddell Seals | 05 Feb 2025 | 00:07:07 | |
What does it take to be the world's southernmost living mammal? Guts, grit, and...super milk? Learn what makes the Weddell seal one of the toughest—and cutest—animals to ever flop around the Antarctic coast. Special thanks to our friends at Montana State University and the Erebus Bay Weddell Seal Population Study for providing the seal recordings heard in this episode—NMFS Permits No. 1032-1917 and No. 26375 according to their chronological appearance in the story. You can check out their work at https://weddellsealscience.com/index.html | |||
| An Antarctic Bestiary - Part 1. Albatrosses of the Open Sea | 14 Jan 2025 | 00:08:46 | |
The flying style of the wandering albatross is legendary, as is its commitment to love. Learn about this iconic seabird and the human activity threatening its survival. | |||
| A cabled ocean | 08 Nov 2024 | 00:06:36 | |
As seasonal landfast ice dwindles in the Arctic, towns in the high north are starting to feel the sting of increased wave activity and dangerous storms. To help track changes to coastal ice, WHOI assistant scientist Maddie Smith and a team led by Sandia National Laboratories are using a novel method to measure wave activity using lasers and internet cables on the Alaskan seafloor. | |||
| It's always freezing in the Arctic. Or is it? | 04 Nov 2024 | 00:05:34 | |
WHOI experts dig into a popular misconception that the Arctic is always frigid. | |||
| A champion submersible | 23 Oct 2024 | 00:07:17 | |
The humble origins of human-occupied submersible Alvin began alongside Cheerios and Wheaties in the General Mills factory. | |||
| Tracking big fish at fine scales | 08 Oct 2024 | 00:05:36 | |
WHOI researcher Martin Arostegui tracks how spearfish take advantage of local currents to find food. | |||
| Puzzling over a mollusk mystery | 07 Oct 2024 | 00:10:42 | |
What’s causing a contagious cancer to spread among clams along Cape Cod? WHOI scientists investigate. | |||
| An Underwater Starfield | 09 Aug 2024 | 00:06:40 | |
Oceanus writer Hannah Piecuch details an intimate encounter with creatures of the open sea while on a swim near Cornwall, England. | |||
| Will the Gulf Stream really shutdown? | 09 Aug 2024 | 00:05:22 | |
Startling scientific reports show how a warming planet could ground the Gulf Stream—a major cog in the Atlantic Ocean's circulation—to a halt. But is the likelihood of such a shutdown being exaggerated? | |||
| Remembering Titanic with Cathy Offinger | 30 Sep 2025 | 00:07:19 | |
We sit down with the WHOI Oceanographer Emeritus and one of the lead navigators on ocean explorer Robert Ballard's 1985 team to learn what the expedition was like and how it's impacted her life since. Produced by Daniel Hentz with editing from Evan Lubofsky. Audio from the discovery courtesy of WHOI Archives and the National Deep Submergence Facility (NDSF). | |||
| An open polar sea? | 09 Aug 2024 | 00:05:30 | |
Not long ago, Victorian-age explorers celebrated the notion of an ice-free Arctic in hopes of finding faster shipping routes between Europe and Asia. Instead, they would find an impassable ice field and treacherous glaciers. Today, warming from climate change is on track to create these once-fabled ice-free days in the Arctic. | |||
| As illegal fishing rages on, is there any hope on the horizon? | 08 Aug 2024 | 00:05:49 | |
WHOI economist Yaqin Liu weighs in on the scourge of illegal fishing and what can be done to catch offenders. | |||
| Harnessing the ocean to power transportation | 18 Sep 2025 | 00:07:23 | |
WHOI scientists are part of a team working to turn seaweed into biofuel. Written by Alison Pearce Stevens and narrated by Scott Dickson. Read along by going to https://go.whoi.edu/seaweedfuel Photography by Jennifer Adler, © Jennifer Adler Photography. | |||
| Do plastics last for thousands of years in the ocean? | 07 Aug 2025 | 00:06:27 | |
WHOI marine chemist Collin Ward weighs in on concerns about the longevity of plastic waste. Written by Alison Pearce Stevens. Narrated by Scott Dickson. Image courtesy of Unsplash. | |||
| Behind the blast | 17 Jul 2025 | 00:07:49 | |
Meet the WHOI marine superintendent behind the iconic explosion in Spielberg's thriller, Jaws. Written by Evan Lubofsky. Narrated by Hannah Piecuch. Read along by going to: https://go.whoi.edu/behindtheblast | |||
| Saving Tico | 03 Jul 2025 | 00:13:47 | |
A manatee’s odyssey and the role of currents in marine mammal conservation. Written and read by Daniel Hentz. Artwork by Charin Park, © Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Read along by going to https://go.whoi.edu/savingtico | |||
| Are offshore wind farms harming whales? | 18 Jun 2025 | 00:08:01 | |
WHOI whale biologist Mark Baumgartner weighs in on the impacts of offshore wind development. Written by Alison Pearce Stevens. Narrated by Rowan Quince Buckton. Whale call recordings were taken from the Watkins Marine Mammal Database. They include (in order) the humpback whale and the critically endangered North Atlantic right whale. Read along at https://go.whoi.edu/offshorewindwhale | |||
| Deep-sea amphipod name inspired by literary masterpiece | 25 Apr 2025 | 00:09:25 | |
The name of a newly discovered species pays tribute to Cervantes’ Don Quixote, reinforcing themes of sweetness and beauty. Written by Evan Lubofsky. Narrated by Scott Dickson. (Illustration by Felipe Gamonal at Instituto Milenio de Oceanografia) Click the link to read along: https://go.whoi.edu/donquixote | |||
| The long journey of bottle No.71645 | 10 Apr 2025 | 00:06:26 | |
A drift bottle released in 1968 to study ocean currents was found on a Maine beach. What have we learned about these marine highways since this early experiment began? Written by Evan Lubofsky. Narrated by Scott Dickson. Read along: https://go.whoi.edu/bottle71645 (Photo by Jan Hahn, © Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution) | |||
| Making Waves: A fighting chance for North Atlantic right whales | 22 Jan 2026 | 00:07:46 | |
Senior biologist and WHOI Emeritus Research Scholar Michael Moore explains why there's still hope for critically endangered North Atlantic right whales. He tells his story in front of a live audience in Woods Hole for "Making Waves: A Science Story Slam," the culmination of a first-of-its-kind science storytelling workshop hosted by the Transom Story Lab and Atlantic Public Media in June 2025. (Original photo by Liz Lerner, Artwork by Daniel Hentz) | |||
| Making Waves: Salty seas with a chance of rain | 26 Mar 2026 | 00:08:02 | |
Oceanographer Ray Schmitt and his sons take top prize in a rainfall forecasting competition. Now they run a company, Salient Predictions, which helps agricultural companies stay ahead of our changing climate. The secret to their weather prediction success? Ocean salinity! Schmitt tells his story live in Woods Hole for "Making Waves: A Science Story Slam," a first-of-its-kind science storytelling workshop hosted by the Transom Story Lab and Atlantic Public Media in June 2025. (Original photo by Liz Lerner, Artwork by Daniel Hentz) | |||
| Making Waves: A promise to end microplastics | 11 Mar 2026 | 00:07:49 | |
For research engineer Beckett Colson, finding a solution to microplastics is a project 11 years in the making. He tells his story live in Woods Hole for "Making Waves: A Science Story Slam," a first-of-its-kind science storytelling workshop hosted by the Transom Story Lab and Atlantic Public Media in June 2025. (Original photo by Liz Lerner, Artwork by Daniel Hentz) | |||
| Making Waves: Losing sight, but not vision | 18 Feb 2026 | 00:09:29 | |
Amy Bower shares how she navigates blindness as a physical oceanographer. She tells her story live in Woods Hole for "Making Waves: A Science Story Slam," a first-of-its-kind science storytelling workshop hosted by the Transom Story Lab and Atlantic Public Media in June 2025. (Original photo by Liz Lerner, Artwork by Daniel Hentz) | |||
| Making Waves: An ode to the deep sea | 05 Feb 2026 | 00:08:08 | |
WHOI Senior Scientist and marine chemist Julie Huber muses on her first love: an underwater volcano. She tells her story in front of a live audience in Woods Hole for "Making Waves: A Science Story Slam," the culmination of a first-of-its-kind science storytelling workshop hosted by the Transom Story Lab and Atlantic Public Media in June 2025. (Original photo by Liz Lerner, Artwork by Daniel Hentz) | |||
| Making Waves: A humbling (and a rumbling) on the seafloor | 08 Apr 2026 | 00:08:37 | |
WHOI Postdoctoral Scholar and geoscientist Jonas Preine learned the true meaning of science while testing his thesis on deep-sea volcanoes near Santorini, Greece. Preine tells his story live in Woods Hole for "Making Waves: A Science Story Slam," a first-of-its-kind science storytelling workshop hosted by the Transom Story Lab and Atlantic Public Media in June 2025. (Original photo by Liz Lerner, Artwork by Daniel Hentz) | |||
| Alvin v. the swordfish | 16 May 2026 | 00:07:01 | |
During a 1967 dive off Florida, a startled swordfish rammed the famed submersible Alvin—lodging its sword in the hull and forcing the crew to abort the mission. Written by Evan Lubofsky. Narrated by Daniel Hentz Read along at https://go.whoi.edu/alvinvswordfish (Sound effects are used for dramatic purposes and may not reflect what was actually heard in the submersible) | |||