Blog posts by Bill Dennison
Sediment dredge offshore Ocean City beach.

Atlantic Estuarine Research Society conference in Ocean City, Maryland

Bill Dennison ·
3 April 2014
Science Communication |     1 comments

On March 28-29, 150 scientists gathered in Ocean City for a day and a half of talks, posters, eating and drinking, ice skating and swimming (indoors). The Atlantic Estuarine Research Society (AERS) is the original group of estuarine scientists, formed in 1949, which has been replicated first nationally and increasingly globally which has evolved into the Coastal and Estuarine Research Federation.

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Cross Sound ferry approaching New London, Connecticut

Long Island Sound 'listening tour' to initiate environmental report cards: Part 2

Bill Dennison ·
27 March 2014
Environmental Report Cards | 

Following our Connecticut stops, we took the Cross Sound Ferry from New London, CT over to the tip of the north fork of Long Island at Orient Point. From the ferry we could see some important features of Long Island Sound. First, as we sailed out of the Thames River, we could see the rocky headlands, industrial development (particularly the submarine manufacturing base) and busy harbor traffic.

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Earthplace visit: (left to right) Bill Nuttle, Bill Dennison, Gary Wikfors, Dick Harris, Tripp Killin, Pete Fabroni, Norm Bloom, Caroline Wicks, Anthony Kung, Nikki Cantatore.

Long Island Sound 'listening tour' to initiate environmental report cards: Part 1

Bill Dennison ·
25 March 2014
Environmental Report Cards |     1 comments

Bill Nuttle, Caroline Wicks, Anthony Kung and I circumnavigated Long Island Sound, crossing it at both ends (over the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Bridge on the western end and aboard the Cross Sound Ferry on the eastern end), and drove through most of the Connecticut coast and the length of Long Island. We visited five different groups of scientists, resource managers and local conservation groups in Connecticut and Long Island, New York in March (10-13).

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Eva Koch (far right) and fellow graduate students in route to a conference: (left to right) Penny Hall, Amy Slifko, Cor from the Philippines, Dave Tomasko, Eva.

Seagrasses and a little girl lost their greatest champion: Evamaria Koch (1961-2014)

Bill Dennison ·
20 March 2014
   1 comments

Evamaria Koch died last week from lung cancer. Lung cancer in non-smokers is particularly aggressive and Eva was not diagnosed until the disease had taken hold. She was very guarded about her condition, so most of her friends and colleagues were shocked to learn of her death. Eva was born to German parents in Brazil where she grew up and received her undergraduate training at the Universidad de Rio Grande.

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Harbor School on Governors Island

A visit to New York Harbor School on Governors Island

Bill Dennison ·
18 March 2014
Science Communication |     1 comments

A team from the Integration and Application Network stopped off at New York Harbor School for a visit and quick tour. Getting there was part of the fun, as we drove right by the newly completed One World Trade Center, towering over lower Manhattan. We parked down near the Battery and boarded a ferry that left from a pier adjacent to the Staten Island Ferry. The small Governors Island ferry moors at the northern end of the island, which is shaped like an ice cream cone.

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Geological Strata by Alexander von Humboldt

The poetry and art of Alexander von Humboldt

Bill Dennison ·
13 March 2014
Science Communication | 

'Scientists who made a difference' series … This blog accompanies the biographical sketch of Alexander von Humboldt that Bill Nuttle recently posted provides a selection of his writings as poetry and one of his scientific sketches as art. The 'Poetry' uses von Humboldt's exact words (translated from German) in prose form to focus on cadence and word choice. It captures von Humboldt's philosophy of natural science connections that was in his multi-volume treatise entitled 'Cosmos:

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Long Island Sound: Prospects for the Urban Sea book synopsis

Bill Dennison ·
6 March 2014
Science Communication |     1 comments

In early 2014, a 558 pp. book “Long Island Sound: Prospects for the Urban Sea” was published. The co-editors JS Latimer, MA Tedesco, RL Swanson, C Yarish, PE Stacey and C Carza were able to get 57 contributors to produce this comprehensive summary of the state of science in Long Island Sound. Springer lists the book for $279 and the eBook for $219, which is a steep price.

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New Insights Executive Summary

New Insights report: Converting geeky science into understandable stories

Bill Dennison ·
4 March 2014
Science Communication | 

In collaboration with the Chesapeake Bay Program and US Geological Survey (USGS), we released a report entitled "New Insights: Science-based evidence of water quality improvements, challenges, and opportunities in the Chesapeake". The release was conducted at the Chesapeake Bay Program in Annapolis on 25 February 2014 . We produced a 52 pp. full color report and a small trifold executive summary to accompany the full report.

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Bill Dennison at the Australian Institute of Marine Science in 1985 (left) and visiting again in 2014 (right).

A visit to the Australian Institute of Marine Science

Bill Dennison ·
25 February 2014
Science Communication |     1 comments

My first visit to the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) was in 1985, when I joined Doig Capone and Linda Duguay on a collaborative project sponsored by the U.S. National Science Foundation. I was on a Coastal Marine Scholar postdoctoral fellowship at the Marine Sciences Research Center (now the School of a Marine and Atmospheric Sciences) at Stony Brook University.

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Group photo at Great Barrier Reef climate change resilience index workshop, James Cook University.

Developing a climate change resilience index for the Great Barrier Reef: Part 2

Bill Dennison ·
20 February 2014
Science Communication | 

Following a day of scientific talks where the various climate change resilience indicators were presented, we had dinner at a nice restaurant on The Strand, a popular Townsville promenade overlooking the harbor. On the second day, we sketched a few conceptual diagrams, generated a prototype reef resilience index and storyboarded a trifold document.

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