Page: 061: Element Cycling
August 3rd, 2025
While not building far superior flowerbeds, Alan has been visiting graveyards to find loads of famous deep-sea people, and Thom has been avoiding lead poisoning at his brand new, but somehow also old and rickety, house.
This episode is absolutely bursting with news so make sure to scroll down to the Further Resources section for all the links and information!
To start off; Alicella gigantea is having a great month, the wiki page that was updated last month by Shaun and Alan during a Deep-Sea Podcast Patreon collaboration, was hosted on the main Wikipedia page as a featured article. Alicella was also featured on Radio New Zealand's’ critter of the week.
Professor Alan Jamieson discusses his recent "food for thought" paper that challenges the long-held 200-meter definition, arguing for a more scientifically relevant boundary of 1,000 meters. Find out why this seemingly arbitrary line might be doing "a lot of damage" to our understanding and attitude towards the deep sea.
Our Guest this month is Professor Ronnie N. Glud, a leading biochemist and Director of the Danish Centre for Hadal Research (HADAL). This is a fascinating episode about trench mud that was previously thought to be devoid of life but now revealed by Professor Glud and his team as dynamic hotspots for biological activity and intensified element cycling
We hear from Jason Fahy, the project lead for NOAA Ocean Exploration Cooperative Institute all about searching for Shipwrecks in Lake Ontario.
An exciting project charting shipwrecks in the Great Lakes using cutting-edge ROV technology for 3D modelling.
Friend of the show Moku Art Studio is hosting a series of Reef Chats in collaboration with Sustainable Ocean Alliance. You can find the first of these chats, which focuses on the Deep-Sea and features a fun and casual conversation between scientist Paola Santiago Padua, and artist Meghan Jones, on Youtube.
If you are interested in deep-sea and art collaboration then check out a new Art Sea Initiative through the Deep Sea Biology Society!
Ever heard Thom ask you to leave a voice message on the podcast and haven't the time to figure out how? Well we now have a handy message box widget right on the site (see below) where you can record a message for Thom and Al!
We want to say a huge thank you to those patrons who have already pledged to support us.
C Wright
Thanks again for tuning in, we’ll deep-see you next time!
Twitter: Alan - @Hadalbloke | Thom - @ThomLinley
Instagram: Thom - @thom.linley
Bluesky: Thom - @deepseapod.com
The graves of Edinburgh
John Young Buchanan - Chemist on the Challenger Expedition
Edward Forbes - Deep-sea naturalist
Sir John Murray - Father of modern oceanography
Notable people buried in Dean Cemetery
Reconsidering the term ‘deep sea’ | ICES Journal of Marine Science | Oxford Academic
Mesophotic and Deep Benthic Communities Expeditions
Historic Shipwrecks Come to Light in the Great Lakes - The New York Times
Lake Ontario National Marine Sanctuary -- Live!
Deep-sea Limpet named after OnePiece character
Microbial Life on Earth: A Model for the Cosmos
Reef Chat from Moku Art Studio with Paola Santiago Padua and Meghan Jones
Scientists find bioplastic that vanishes 80% even in extreme deep-sea conditions
Alan was featured on another podcast:
We've Only Explored 0.001% of the Deep Sea - What's Lurking Below? | Discover Magazine Podcast
Join our Patreon to get access to the Discord
https://www.patreon.com/c/deepseapodcast
The supergiant amphipod wiki page
Tagged: #Podcast #scicomm #Science #MarineBiology #DeepSea #DeepOcean #AlanJamieson #ThomLinley #deepseacreatures #deepseaspecies