Breaking Waves
The purpose of the Breaking Waves section in Oceanography is to provide an outlet for short peer-reviewed papers that describe novel approaches to multidisciplinary problems in oceanography. These provocative papers will present findings that are synthetic by design and have the potential to move the field of oceanography forward or in new directions.
SUBMIT AN ARTICLE
Authors should submit a brief email to Associate Editor Alistair Hobday that outlines their ideas for papers prior to manuscript preparation. This step will ensure that authors receive appropriate feedback prior to investing their time and energy in preparing manuscripts that may be unsuitable for publication in this forum. Correspondence with the Breaking Waves editor and submission of manuscripts should be done electronically through the Scholastica portal. File formats for text, figures, and photographs must be consistent with existing style guidelines for Oceanography.
2020
Advancing Ocean Observation with an AI-Driven Mobile Robotic Explorer
By A. Saad et al.
2019
Rapid Climate-Driven Circulation Changes Threaten Conservation of Endangered North Atlantic Right Whales
By N.R. Record et al.
2014
A Wave Glider Approach to Fisheries Acoustics: Transforming How We Monitor the Nation’s Commercial Fisheries in the 21st Century
By C.H. Greene et al.
2013
Warm Arctic, Cold Continents: A Common Pattern Related to Arctic Sea Ice Melt, Snow Advance, and Extreme Winter Weather
By J. Cohen et al.
2011
Holes in Progressively Thinning Arctic Sea Ice Lead to New Ice Algae Habitat
By S.H. Lee et al.
2008
Eastern US Continental Shelf Carbon Budget: Integrating Models, Data Assimilation, and Analysis
By E. Hofmann et al.
Regional Differences in the Role of Eddy Pumping in the North Atlantic Subtropical Gyre: Historical Conundrums Revisited
By B. Mouriño-Carballido and S. Neuer
2007
Shallow Water ’06: A Joint Acoustic Propagation/Nonlinear Internal Wave Physics Experiment
By D. Tang et al.
Coral Disease, Environmental Drivers, and the Balance Between Coral and Microbial Associates
By D. Harvell et al.
2005
Coastal Ocean Physics and Red Tides: An Example from Monterey Bay, California
By J.P. Ryan et al.
2004
Supply-Side Ecology and the Response of Zooplankton to Climate-Driven Changes in North Atlantic Ocean Circulation
By the MERCINA Working Group
2003
Impact of Climate Variability on the Recovery of Endangered North Atlantic Right Whales
By C.H. Greene et al.
2002
Setting a Precautionary Catch Limit for Antarctic Krill
By R.P. Hewitt et al.

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