The ocean teems with life that thrives under difficult situations in unusual environments. Palumbi will take the audience to the absolute limits of the aquatic world — the fastest and deepest, the hottest and oldest creatures of the oceans. He brings to life the sea's most extreme species, and reveals how they succeed across the wide expanse of the world’s global ocean.
Stephen R. Palumbi, Ph.D., is the Director of the Hopkins Marine Station and Professor of Marine Science at Stanford. His previous work has appeared in publications from the New York Times to the Seattle Times, and he has contributed film projects and interviews to many television programs from the BBC/Animal Planet, to the Discovery Channel. He is also the author of The Death and Life of Monterey Bay and The Evolution Explosion: How Humans Cause Rapid Evolutionary Change.
The ocean teems with life that thrives under difficult situations in unusual environments. Palumbi will take the audience to the absolute limits of the aquatic world — the fastest and deepest, the hottest and oldest creatures of the oceans. He brings to life the sea's most extreme species, and reveals how they succeed across the wide expanse of the world’s global ocean.
Stephen R. Palumbi, Ph.D., is the Director of the Hopkins Marine Station and Professor of Marine Science at Stanford. His previous work has appeared in publications from the New York Times to the Seattle Times, and he has contributed film projects and interviews to many television programs from the BBC/Animal Planet, to the Discovery Channel. He is also the author of The Death and Life of Monterey Bay and The Evolution Explosion: How Humans Cause Rapid Evolutionary Change.
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