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Earth's oceans may seem like an expanse of the same water to us, but try telling that to a sea turtle or a whale shark.
The stinky sargassum is currently traveling across the Atlantic and Caribbean. It’s the largest amount ever recorded.
Sargassum levels across the eastern Caribbean and western Atlantic reached record highs in April 2025, with continued growth ...
May 4-10 is Hurricane Preparedness Week. If you missed the daily stories on suggestions from NOAA, we have them all right ...
Plenty of Caribbean islands are known for their beaches, but blissfully beautiful Antigua beats them all. With 365 beaches ...
Carnival Corp's luxury cruise line, Seabourn, announced its 2027 world cruise will hit 67 ports in 19 countries. Planning it ...
The harrowing tail of survival will be followed by a Q&A with Executive Producer Robert Sennot On Saturday May 3, Lafayette ...
Pickle Bill’s Lobster House in Grand River isn’t just a restaurant – it’s a full-blown maritime fantasy that somehow washed ashore in northeastern Ohio. The moment you spot the lighthouse tower rising ...
If you have ever heard of the Sargasso Sea, raise your hand. How about sargassum seaweed? Never heard of either one, you ...
New high-resolution satellite map reveals nearly 100,000 unknown ocean mountains, or seamounts, boosting climate and maritime ...
In shallow coastal waters around the world, mud and other fine-grained sediments such as clay and silt form critical blue ...
The amount of sargassum seaweed moving through the Atlantic and Caribbean reached record levels in April, according to researchers at the University of South Florida.