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PEERREVIEWED

PUBLICATIONS

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Patel, S.H., Alexander, R., Davis, F., Garcia, L., Jennings, N., Pappas, W., N. Shivers, N. Trenholm. (2024) The first deployments of Pop-up satellite archival tags on black sea bass (Centropristis striata). Aquaculture, Fish and Fisheries, 4, e171. https://doi.org/10.1002/aff2.171

Eriksen M, Cowger W, Erdle LM, Coffin S, Villarrubia-Gómez P, et al. (2023) A growing plastic smog, now estimated to be over 170 trillion plastic particles afloat in the world’s oceans—Urgent solutions required. PLOS ONE 18(3): e0281596. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0281596

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Eriksen, M., Borgogno, F., Villarrubia-gómez, P., Anderson, E., Box, C., & Trenholm, N. 2020.  Mitigation strategies to reverse the rising trend of plastics in Polar Regions. Environment International, 139 (March), 105704.

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B. Yeo, H. Takada R. Yamashita, Y. Okazaki, K. Uchida, T.Tokai, K. Tanaka, and N. Trenholm. 2019.  PCBs and PBDEs in Microplastic Particles and Zooplankton in Open Water in the Pacific Ocean and around the Coast of Japan. Marine Pollution Bulletin. No. October

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Zettler, E. R., H. Takada, B. Monteleone, N. Mallos, M. Eriksen and L. A. Amaral-Zettler. 2017. Incorporating citizen science to study plastics in the environment. Anal. Methods, 9:1392 – 1403, DOI: 10.1039/C6AY02716D

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J.K. Willis, D. Carrol, I. Fenty, G. Kohli A. Khazendar, M. Morglighem, M. Rutherford, and N. Trenholm. 2018. Ocean-Ice Interactions in Inglefield Gulf: Early Results from NASA’s Ocean’s Melting Greenland Mission. Oceanography 31(2).
 

I. Fenty, J.K. Willis, A. Khasendar, S. Dinardo, R. Forsberg, I. Fukumori, D. Holland, M. Jakobsson, D. Moller, J. Morison, A. Munchow, E. Rignot, M.Scholok, A.F. Thompson, K. Tinto, M. Rutherford and N. Trenholm. 2016. Oceans Melting Greenland: Early results from NASA’s ocean-ice mission in Greenland. Oceanography. 29(4):72-83.

Testimonials

“We have worked hard to demonstrate the critical importance of Arctic bathymetry, and particularly the bathymetry around Greenland to our understanding of the melting of the Greenland Ice Sheet and its impact on global sea level rise.  Efforts in the GO-MARIE mission are important in helping us fill critical mapping gaps in these polar regions.  We also appreciate ORP’s keen willingness to send the data you collect to Seabed 2030; your mapping efforts have already contributed to the slowly building map of Arctic bathymetry.   I understand and support ORP’s desire to obtain a sonar capable of mapping in the deeper waters represented by many of the Arctic fjords so that you can maintain and enhance the Ocean Research Project's mission and very much hope to see this new capability come to fruition.”

Larry Mayer - Professor and Director, Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping
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