Advisor Associated Websites
Billy Causey - http://floridakeys.noaa.gov/
Paul J. Boyle - http://www.nyaquarium.com/
Joan Embery - http://www.joanembery.com/Joan_Embery_About.htm
Paul R. Epstein - http://chge.med.harvard.edu/index.html
John W. Farrington - http://www.whoi.edu/
Michael Hager - http://www.sdnhm.org/
Jane Lubchenco - http://oregonstate.edu/
Andreas Merkl - http://www.ceaconsulting.com/
Kathryn D. Sullivan - http://www.cosi.org/

Seafood Choices
Seafood Choices Alliance - http://www.seafoodchoices.com/home.php
Seafood Watch - http://www.mbayaq.org/cr/seafoodwatch.asp

Ocean Quiz
http://www.oceanquiz.org/

Large Marine Ecosystems
http://www.edc.uri.edu/lme/clickable-map.htm

Cool Downloads: Video, Photos, Screensavers, Wallpaper
http://marinebio.org/Oceans/Resource/downloads.asp

Fun Facts
http://www.marinebio.com/MarineBio/Facts/

Aquariums
Monterey Bay Aquarium - www.mbayaq.org/
National Aquarium in Baltimore - www.aqua.org/
Georgia Aquarium - www.georgiaaquarium.org/
New England Aquarium - www.neaq.org/
Tennessee Aquarium - www.tennis.org/
Seattle Aquarium - www.seattleaquarium.org/
Shedd Aquarium - www.sheddaquarium.org/
Long Beach Aquarium of the Pacific - www.aquariumofpacific.org/
Florida Aquarium - www.flaquarium.org/
South Carolina Aquarium - www.scaquarium.org/
Mystic Aquarium - www.mysticaquarium.org/
New York Aquarium - www.nyaquarium.com/
Birch Aquarium at Scripps - aquarium.ucsd.edu/
Oklahoma Aquarium - www.okaquarium.org/
Albuquerque Aquarium - www.cabq.gov/biopark/aquarium/
Steinhart Aquarium - www.calacademy.org/aquarium/
Texas State Aquarium - www.texasstateaquarium.org/
Great Lakes Aquarium - www.glaquarium.org/
Virginia Aquarium - www.vmsm.com/
North Carolina Aquariums - www.ncaquariums.com/

If all the oceans were evaporated, the amount of salt remaining could cover the continents to a depth of 5 feet.


In that coral structure and chemistry is similar to human bone, it has been used successfully in bone grafts to help human bones to heal quickly and cleanly.


The water pressure at the bottom of the Challenger Deep is over 8 tons per square inch and is equal to a human trying to hold 50 jumbo jets.