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Canadian robot finds a buried weight equal to 250 million elephants . . . A groundbreaking discovery has emerged from the depths of our oceans—a discovery so massive that it’s comparable to the weight of 250 million elephants Canadian scientists have harnessed the power of robotics to unveil hidden treasures beneath the sea, fundamentally reshaping our understanding of ocean life and its impact on the planet
This Canadian robot discovered an amount of phytoplankton mass . . . In an exciting breakthrough, researchers from Dalhousie University in Canada have discovered an enormous amount of phytoplankton under the ocean’s surface—an amount so massive it could be compared to 250 million elephants This discovery was made possible by an innovative network of robots that could measure the biomass of phytoplankton in ways that satellites cannot, opening up new
Organism equivalent to weight of 250 million elephants hiding inside . . . Canadian scientists have accurately measured the weight of phytoplankton, marine plants that are so tiny that the naked eye cannot see them They used a sophisticated network of 903 robotic floats to look deep inside the oceans and found that these life-sustaining phytoplankton form 346 million tonnes of organic matter, journalist Jason Deegan
This Canadian Robot Discovers the Equivalent of 250 Million Elephants . . . Imagine an underwater world teeming with life so vast that it could weigh the equivalent of 250 million elephants This is the astonishing discovery made by Canadian researchers, who have used innovative robotic technology to measure the biomass of phytoplankton, one of the smallest but most important organisms in the ocean By diving deeper than satellites ever could, these robots are
Global fleet of undersea robots reveals the phytoplankton hidden . . . Researchers at Dalhousie University are changing that with the help of a growing global network of underwater robots known as Biogeochemical-Argo floats These devices travel below the ocean's surface and measure phytoplankton where satellites cannot As part of the BGC-Argo program, the floats are deployed across the globe in an international effort to monitor the ocean's biology, geology and
Jaw-Dropping Ocean Discovery: Canadian Robot Uncovers Hidden Mass Equal . . . A fleet of Canadian-built robots has illuminated the ocean’s hidden engine, revealing a massive store of living carbon long overlooked by surface-focused methods By surveying phytoplankton from the surface to the deep, the team estimates a global biomass of about 314 teragrams —roughly 346 million tons—equal to 250 million elephants concealed beneath the sea’s shimmering skin The
Canadian robot finds the ocean’s hidden weight—equal to 250 million . . . A fascinating new discovery from Dalhousie University in Canada has unveiled the hidden weight of the ocean’s phytoplankton, revealing an enormous biomass previously underestimated Using a network of 903 robotic floats, researchers have measured the global biomass of these microscopic marine plants, finding that it totals around 314 teragrams, or 346 million tons—roughly the combined
A Canadian-built robot uncovers the ocean’s astonishing secret: a . . . Researchers at Dalhousie University in Canada have made a groundbreaking discovery by measuring the global biomass of phytoplankton, tiny marine plants that play a crucial role in regulating the Earth’s climate Using a network of 903 robotic floats, the team found that the biomass totals around 314 teragrams, or 346 million tons, roughly equivalent to the weight of 250 million elephants