Sunday, May 7, 2017

The infinite now

Over the past months I've been working with Australian photographer Ray Collins to bring his amazing oceanscapes to life in the form of cinemagraphs, a blend between photography and video. Each cinemagraph is created from one of Ray's stills, and sets it in infinite motion, making a unique moment in time last forever.
These cinemagraphs inspired André Heuvelman from the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra to get together with pianist Jeroen van Vliet to record a very moving custom soundtrack, which I combined with a selection of the cinemagraphs.
You can see the original cinemagraphs at armanddijcks.com/cinemagraphs-waves


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Friday, May 5, 2017

Image of the week : An island carved by water

NASA acquired October 17, 2016

From NASA

The story of Long Island began with ice.
As glaciers retreated at the end of the last Ice Age, they dropped and piled up hills of sediment.
When the ice melted and seas rose, those piles of glacial debris were surrounded by the sea. Stretching out into the Atlantic like a giant fish, the island continues to change.
Thousands of years later, water still re-sculpts the island’s shoreline.
On October 17, 2016, the Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8 captured this image of Long Island’s East End.
While the North Shore is characterized by craggy inlets and peninsulas, the South Shore is lined with smooth, protective sand bars—the result of constantly pounding waves.
Between the branching tails of the East End lies Gardiners Island, which spans more than 3,300 acres and is closed to the public—a source of curiosity given its proximity to population-dense Long Island.
In the 1600s, Gardiners was believed to have a cache of pirate gold.
Modern scientists appreciate it for another form of booty: its rich coastal geology.

On the northern end of Gardiners Island (above), a fang-like feature juts into the water.
This cuspate foreland at Bostwick Point owes its shape to the waves.
As they hit the shore, waves agitate sediment along the coast.
When they break at an angle to the coast, this creates a current parallel to the coastline called a “longshore current.”
Combined, these processes can rake sand and sediment into this triangular feature.
The opposite end of the island (below) includes a long, finger-shaped sand bank called a spit.
These sand features frequently form at the mouths of inlets and in places where water must move around coastal barriers and other features.
The spit projecting from the island’s southern end has grown by nearly a mile (1.6 kilometers) over the past few decades.
In the process, the ocean has breached its length at several points, creating smaller islets like Cartwright Island.

 Long Island with the GeoGarage platform

Coastline breaches most often form during hurricanes, nor’easters, and other potent storms, said Andrew Ashton, a coastal geologist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
However, over time, the constant pounding of waves tends to smooth out spits, refilling the gaps between them.
Strong currents tend to develop around such features.
In this image, the faint, light-colored streams of sediment in the water trace this movement.
The spit acts like a funnel, forcing water to move through a narrower channel and resulting in more powerful currents.
To get the same amount of water through the space, its flow must speed up, Ashton said.
“This little spit coming off the island is trying to choke that water off.”

Thursday, May 4, 2017

Albatrosses counted from space

Craggy outcrop: At first glance there may not be much to look at...


...but the more you examine the WorldView-3 images, you begin to notice white dots

From BBC by Jonathan Amos

Scientists have started counting individual birds from space.

They are using the highest-resolution satellite images available to gauge the numbers of Northern Royal albatrosses.
This endangered animal nests almost exclusively on some rocky sea-stacks close to New Zealand’s Chatham Islands.
The audit, led by experts at the British Antarctic Survey, represents the first time any species on Earth has had its entire global population assessed from orbit.
The scientists report the satellite technique in Ibis, a journal of the British Ornithologists' Union.

photo : Paul Scofield

It is likely to have a major impact on efforts to conserve the Northern Royals (Diomedea sanfordi).
Ordinarily, these birds are very difficult to appraise because their nesting sites are so inaccessible.
Not only are the sea-stacks far from NZ (680km), but their vertical cliffs mean that any visiting scientist might also have to be adept at rock climbing.
"Getting the people, ships or planes to these islands to count the birds is expensive, but it can be very dangerous as well," explained Dr Peter Fretwell from BAS.
This makes the DigitalGlobe WorldView-3 satellite something of a breakthrough.
It can acquire pictures of Earth that capture features as small as 30cm across.

The US government has only recently permitted such keen resolution to be distributed outside of the military and intelligence sectors.
WorldView-3 can see the nesting birds as they sit on eggs to incubate them or as they guard newly hatched chicks.

With a body length of over a metre, the adult albatrosses only show up as two or three pixels, but their white plumage makes them stand out against the surrounding vegetation.
The BAS team literally counts the dots.

 Bird island, South Georgia with the GeoGarage platform (SHN nautical chart)

The researchers first checked their methodology at Bird Island, South Georgia.
This is a unique nature reserve in the South Atlantic where the nests of another species of great albatross, the Wandering albatross (Diomedea exulans), are individually marked with GPS locators.

The biggest confounding factor is large, light-coloured rocks.
But the analysis showed the team could get a very close match between the pixelated birds in the space images and the nests that were recorded in the ground-truth data.
There tends to be a slight over-counting, which the team puts down to breeding partners or non-breeding birds also being captured in a satellite scene.
Applying the technique at the Chatham Islands, the team counted just over 3,600 nests.
This is slightly down on a manual count of 5,700 that was made in 2009.

The birds favour sea-stacks known as The Sisters and the Forty Fours

 Motuhara, Bertier or the Forty Fours island with the GeoGarage platform
(Linz nautical chart)

Dr Fretwell said: "The breeding numbers we counted were much lower than we anticipated, which could show us that the population is declining or it could show just that we had a particularly poor year. But this illustrates why you have to do this over several years, and doing it by satellite is going be a lot cheaper and more efficient."

Dr Paul Scofield at Canterbury Museum, NZ, is a co-author on the Ibis paper.
He described the difficulty of counting the birds in the traditional way at the group of stacks known as the Forty Fours.
"The 44s are particularly tricky," he told BBC News. "I once waited a whole month on the main Chatham Island for the weather to clear so I could land.
"Even if you use a plane, it's a problem as planes are only available infrequently and the wind and cloud prevent flying. Then if you take photos, you have to count them. That can take 100s of hours. This technology still requires the satellite to be in the right place and no cloud but it is certainly cheaper and more reliable."

photo : Paul Scofield

Like the other five species of great albatross, Northern Royals are under pressure for a variety of reasons.
Commercial fishing has depleted the stocks on which these seabirds also feed, and the baited longline gear used by some vessels has an unpleasant knack for attracting foragers and pulling them underwater where they drown.
But the Northern Royals in particular are vulnerable because of their desire to nest only on the Chatham Islands sea-stacks.
If one big storm rolls through at the wrong time of year, it can severely dent breeding success.
"In 1986, a huge storm washed waves over these 50m-tall islands," said Dr Scofield.

photo : Paul Scofield

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Wednesday, May 3, 2017

Meet the billionaire (and ex-fisherman) giving away his fortune to help save the ocean


181-metre (594-foot) vessel to be launched in 2020.
Rokke controls several companies through his 66.7-percent stake in holding company Aker, including oil production group Aker BP, oil services group Aker Solutions, engineering group Kvaerner and biotech and fisheries group Aker Biomarine. 

From Time by Rob Wile

A former-fisherman-turned-billionaire from Norway known for being a ruthless businessman now says he plans to give most of his wealth away.
Kjell Inge Roekke is the tenth-richest man in Norway, with a net worth over $2 billion.
In an interview with Oslo's Aftenposen newspaper published Tuesday, he revealed plans to bequeath his holdings in ways that can benefit society, starting with a state-of-the-art ship that will perform marine research.
"Sea covers 70 percent of Earth's surface and much is not researched," he said.
Among other things, Roekke's ship will remove up to five tons of plastic daily from the ocean and melt it down so it can do no harm.

The path to wealth for Roekke, 55, is a fascinating story.
He was born in a small town on Norway's west coast.
Suffering from dyslexia, he dropped out of high school and moved to Seattle to catch pollock and crab.
Thereafter, he developed what many in Norway describe as "American" traits that have both helped his business and earned him a controversial reputation.

He built his fortune by buying up old boats and modifying them into industrial trawlers.
He returned to Norway in his late '30s and set about acquiring a stake in a 173-year-old Norwegian conglomerate, buying up 40 percent of its shares and merging it with his own Resources Group International.
Forbes reported that Roekke has "earned a reputation as a ruthless corporate raider" throughout his career.
"He was the first one to bring American-style, aggressive capitalism to Norway, daring to use shareholder power to get what he wanted," Steinar Dyrnes, a journalist at the Aftenposten who wrote a biography of Roekke, told Reuters in 2014.

The research ship will carry 30 crew members and 60 scientists
photo : TRG

Roekke is also known for having an explosive temper.
"He is often very charming and friendly," Dyrnes said of Roekke.
"But there is another side. He can be very angry ... which is very un-Norwegian."

Indeed, Roekke spent 23 days in prison after being convicted of bribing his way to a boating license. Afterward, he spent more than $3,000 buying takeout pizzas for his old cellmates.
That generosity has now appeared to have gotten the better of Roekke.
"I want to give back to society the bulk of what I've earned," he told Aftenposten.
"This ship is a part of it. The idea of ​​such a ship has evolved over many years."

Among other things, the ship will be used to conduct research on plastics in the ocean.
photo : TRG

The cost of the ship was not disclosed, but it will include everything from sea and air drones to an auditorium to enormous amounts of lab space.
It will be managed by conservation organization WWF, and be known as REV, short for research expedition vessel.
One of its primary focuses will be how to control the enormous amount of plastic now at sea.

Roekke, who also owns an oil business, has given WWF complete independence as for its mission.
"We are far apart in their views on oil, and we will continue to challenge Røkke when we disagree with him," WFF chief Nina Jensen told Aftenposten, "but in this project we will meet to collectively make a big difference in the environmental struggle."

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