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A view of our world from
space suggests that earth is very much a water planet. Our oceans comprise
an astonishing 70 percent of the earth's surface, lending our planet
its vibrant blue hue. Yet, we are only beginning to understand how unique
our oceans are. More than a century of oceanographic research has revealed
that oceans play a critical role in regulating earth's weather and
climate, house extraordinarily diverse plants and animals, provide food
and medicines, and significantly influence the creation and ever-changing
appearance of our coastlines. However, we are still paddling at the surface
of this immense resource. Knowledge of the oceans, their resources and
their relationship to human activities is vital to our society —
and to our planets existence.
NOAA Research, in cooperation with its research partners,
explores and investigates ocean habitats and resources. We provide scientific
results to help manage and understand fisheries, conserve and protect
our coasts, and build a stronger economy through marine products and businesses,
such as biotechnology and sustainable aquaculture. We also look for changes
in the oceans due to natural and human activities.
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"Inspired
by their majesty and mystery, we depend on our oceans and their
coasts, not just for pleasure and food—although these uses
are central—but also as a counterweight to extremes of heat
and cold on land, as a sponge for absorbing excess carbon, and
as a generator of life-giving oxygen. Although we often view the
ocean as starting where the land ends, that separation is arbitrary.
Land and oceans are part of the same global system. Activities
on one profoundly affect the other."
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