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Cara Wilson

Researcher at National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Publications -  57
Citations -  2756

Cara Wilson is an academic researcher from National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ocean gyre & Bloom. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 56 publications receiving 2366 citations. Previous affiliations of Cara Wilson include Oregon State University & Brookhaven National Laboratory.

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On the Future of Argo: A Global, Full-Depth, Multi-Disciplinary Array

Dean Roemmich, +79 more
TL;DR: The objective is to create a fully global, top-to-bottom, dynamically complete, and multidisciplinary Argo Program that will integrate seamlessly with satellite and with other in situ elements of the Global Ocean Observing System.
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Ten ways remote sensing can contribute to conservation

TL;DR: A group of remote sensing scientists affiliated with government and academic institutions and conservation organizations identified 10 questions in conservation for which the potential to be answered would be greatly increased by use of remotely sensed data and analyses of those data.
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The extreme dependency score: a non‐vanishing measure for forecasts of rare events

TL;DR: The extreme dependency score (EDS) is proposed as a more informative alternative for the assessment of skill in deterministic forecasts of rare events and has the advantage that it can converge to different values for different forecasting systems and furthermore it does not explicitly depend upon the bias of the forecasting system.
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Phytoplankton productivity in the North Pacific ocean since 1900 and implications for absorption of anthropogenic CO2

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used historical records of Secchi depth data to investigate whether dramatic changes in phytoplankton biomass have occurred throughout the North Pacific ocean during this century, and found that although very minor changes may have occurred in this basin over the past 70 years, they are too small to have a significant effect on the rise in atmospheric CO2 concentrations.