Ocean Sciences 2016

Sarah Giddingsnews

The Giddings’ lab just returned from the 2016 Ocean Sciences Conference in New Orleans. Isa gave an excellent talk (her first science talk at a major conference, congrats!) and Maddie presented a great poster with exciting new data. This was the view above the poster hall… a sea of posters and ocean scientists!

Giddings’ lab work featured by SIO!

Sarah Giddingsnews

A fun interview and video highlighting the Giddings’ lab work was published by SIO last week! [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tuF8r2nD8_A&w=640&h=360]

deployment in Agua Hedionda Lagoon

Sarah Giddingsnews

Due to receiving a newly funded USC Sea Grant project, we deployed a mooring in Agua Hedionda Lagoon to compare the influence of waves and wave-current interactions on sediment transport in a more open-water type of lagoon. Thanks to the Carlsbad Aquafarm for their help in mooring deployment and the Hubbs-SeaWorld Research Institute for access to a location to mount our time-lapse … Read More

citizen science highlighted on KPBS

Sarah Giddingsnews

KPBS joined our beach walk on 20 January 2016 and featured a great story on the radio and on-line about the Urban Tides citizen science program as well as the science many of us at SIO are doing to document El Niño’s impact on our coastline. KPBS has been working on a series of El Niño related stories, also check out … Read More

beach walk & citizen science!

Sarah Giddingsnews

20 January 2016, Sarah, Maddie & Astrid joined a beach walk on La Jolla Shores to explain extreme water level events, El Niño, sea level rise, and to introduce folks to the Urban Tides citizen science initiative. The Urban Tides Initiative and the walk are led by USC Sea Grant. Astrid Hsu is a Master of Advanced Studies student in Marine … Read More

lagoon field work continues!

Sarah Giddingsnews

The lab spent the past two days in the field collecting data for Maddie’s lagoon morphodynamics project. The photo here is from Los Penasquitos Lagoon prior to conducting morphodynamic and hydrodynamic surveys following a series of major storms. The estuary looks very different after those storms. Unfortunately none of our arms are long enough to show our excellent oversized lagoon waders … Read More

Happy high tides!

Sarah Giddingsnews

Happy holidays and happy extreme tides! Higher than normal tides this year have fallen on the holidays, the last one was at Thanksgiving, this one was on Christmas eve. The extreme tides + higher sea level caused by El Nino + waves led to coastal flooding along Southern California (unfortunately leading to more line un-happy high tides). These pictures are from … Read More

Seychelles Field work!

Sarah Giddingsnews

Geno, Sarah, Isa, and Rich spent 10 lovely days in the Seychelles doing field work in December… the first trip of several that is part of the NASCar : SLOMO program. NASCar (The North Arabian Sea Circulation – autonomous research): Seychelles Local Ocean Modeling and Observations (SLOMO) The overarching goal for the research is to develop predictive capabilities for physical oceanography for the … Read More

El Niño & extreme event field work begins!

Sarah Giddingsnews

We began field work to examine estuarine response to extreme events during the El Niño winter season. Extreme events of interest include extreme sea level events caused by tides + waves + surge as well as runoff from storms with rainfall. Photos include instrument checks in August and deployments in November.