Sunday, 18 May 2025

Sea Lions v. The Blob

The waters off the coast of Alaska are supposed to be cold, especially in winter. Yet, in the autumn of 2013, they cooled far less than they normally would. A great mass of warm water, 2,000 km (1,250 miles) across and around 100 metres (330 feet) deep, remained trapped in the North Pacific. Nicknamed 'The Blob', this was caused by the weather patterns over the region remaining stuck in a high-pressure mode, preventing the warm water from dissipating with the winds as it should do. With temperatures stuck at up to 4°C (7°F) warmer than normal, the high pressure did not dissipate for eight months.

When it did, tropical winds pushed the warm water up against the American coast, from southern Alaska to southern Mexico, where it basically sat until El Niño kicked off in 2015... and that kept things unusually warm for another year. Inland, this disrupted weather systems leading, among other things, to frequent thunderstorms that sparked what was (at the time) the worst wildfire season in California's history.

Sunday, 11 May 2025

Oligocene (pt 15): Land of the Fire-Beasts

Pyrotherium
Even at the dawn of the Oligocene, South America had already long been isolated from the northern continents, giving it the opportunity to evolve its own distinct mammalian fauna, with many animals quite unlike those seen elsewhere. Most of these strange animals would die out millions of years later when the Isthmus of Panama finally formed. The armadillos are among the exceptions.

Armadillos first evolved on the continent during the previous epoch, if not earlier, but most of the older fossils are incomplete, making it difficult to trace their detailed relationships. The oldest reasonably complete armadillo skulls belong to Kuntinaru, first described in 2011. This lived in Bolivia towards the end of the Oligocene, around 27 million years ago and would already have looked much like modern armadillos, albeit somewhat smaller than the species most familiar to North Americans. 

Sunday, 4 May 2025

Delphinids: Small Dolphins of Shallow Southern Seas

Commerson's dolphin
While related, dolphins and porpoises are regarded as distinct types of animals. Each is placed in its own family, with the two separating at least 15 million years ago. However, telling the two apart is not always easy, at least on a superficial look at their external anatomy. Porpoises are, generally speaking, smaller than dolphins and they have a blunt nose rather than a 'beak'. The problem is that we can say exactly the same about some species that really are dolphins.

In 1766, naturalist Philibert Commerson accompanied explorer Louis-Antoine de Bougainville on what would become the first successful French circumnavigation of the globe. While passing through the Straits of Magellan the following year, he spotted an unusual-looking dolphin close to the ship and sent a description of it back to France. (As a side note, later on in the voyage, it was discovered, much to the crew's shock, that Commerson's assistant was secretly a woman; she is now remembered as the first woman to circumnavigate the globe).