めそ凹すね丸。
132.1K posts

めそ凹すね丸。
@mesosune
単純に歯車とかが回っているだけで延々萌えてるほどの機械好きのシステムエンジニア風味。元々はセキュリティエンジニアで,最近開発専属になりました。ITのことでお困りの際はどうぞ声をかけてみてください。一緒に悩みます(笑)。













The Oceans are Losing their Breath. They’re no longer just "buffering" climate change; they are reaching a structural breaking point. In this second article in a series on Ocean Stratification (the layering of water that prevents mixing), Jan and I examine a "triple whammy" of environmental failures: The Deoxygenation Crisis: Warmer surface layers are trapping heat and losing oxygen. Since the mid-20th century, 1%–2% of global ocean oxygen has vanished, creating "dead zones" where marine species literally struggle to breathe. Chemical & Visual Shifts: We have officially breached the Planetary Boundary for Ocean Acidification, threatening foundational species like coral and shellfish. Simultaneously, the oceans are "darkening" as biomass and particles accumulate in the surface, further trapping heat in a dangerous feedback loop. A Stalling Carbon Pump: The "biological pump"—the process where marine life moves carbon to the deep ocean—is slowing down. Rising temperatures are creating a "thermal wall" that disrupts the (vertical)migration of carbon-recycling species. The Bottom Line: The ocean's capacity to absorb our emissions is flattening. As stratification strengthens and marine heatwaves become the "new normal," the transition of our oceans from a stable climate sink to a volatile risk source is one of the most significant challenges of this century. Links to this new article and the first one covering the physical aspects of Ocean Stratification are in the comments. h/t Tom Harris and Jan Umsonst The Great Decoupling 2: Changes in Ocean Biochemistry Driven by Strengthening Stratification drtomharris.substack.com/p/the-great-de…



















