A meteorite crashes near Arborville, California. An elderly transient discovers, within the sphere, a massive slime mold-like substance (the Blob) that attaches itself to his hand. Three high school students, Brian, Meg and Paul, take him to a hospital. After Brian leaves, Paul witnesses the lower half of the transient melting from exposure to the Blob. As he calls for help, the Blob drops on top of him. Meg arrives to see Paul being devoured by the growing Blob. While she tries to free him, his arm dissolves off, Meg is thrown against a wall and knocked unconscious, and the Blob oozes out of the hospital.
The blob is a large mass of algae that was first spotted floating in the Chukchi Sea between the Alaskan cities of Wainwright and Barrow in July 2009. Its length is at least 19km (12mi).
The algae are colored black, which is considered to be unusual. Early examiners of the algae were unable to determine its species.
The film stars a 27-year-old Steve McQueen in his debut leading role as a teenager, and Aneta Corsaut, as his co-star. The plot depicts a growing corrosive alienamoeba that crashes from outer space in a meteorite and engulfs and dissolves citizens in the small community of Downingtown, Pennsylvania. The origin of The Blob is never identified, and the film ends with a question mark.
Plot
During one long night in a small rural Pennsylvania town in July 1957, teenager Steve Andrews (Steve McQueen) and his girlfriend, Jane Martin (Aneta Corsaut), are kissing on a lovers' lane when they see a meteor crash beyond the next hill. Steve decides to look for it. An old man (Olin Howland) living nearby finds it first. When he pokes the meteorite with a stick, it breaks open, and the small jelly-like blob inside attaches itself to his hand. In pain and unable to scrape or shake it loose, the old man runs onto the road, where he is nearly struck by Steve's car. Steve and Jane take him to Doctor Hallen (Stephen Chase).
Most of the game features a circus theme focused more on humor than serious gameplay. It features claymation-style graphics that were created by photographing and digitizing actual clay models.
The game was one of the two "clay" themed game franchises made by Interplay, the second being a platformer titled Claymates.
History
ClayFighter's design was originally made to compete with fighting games such as Mortal Kombat, but without the heavy violence and gore that was becoming controversial. Interplay pushed the game saying "Parents who object to blood-and-guts games now have an alternative title that gives kids the kind of intense action they want to see in fighting games" to draw sales.
Plot
A meteor made entirely out of clay crash-lands on the grounds of a humble American circus. The goo from the interstellar object contaminates all of the circus' attractions, transforming them into bizarre caricatures of their former selves, with new superpowers.
Fin whales migrate through the Bering Strait during summer to feed in the Chukchi Sea. How many fin whales and where they occur varies every year. Using underwater microphones in the Bering Strait, Erica is trying to determine if changing environmental conditions can explain movements of the fin whales. Hear Erica talk about new information on fin whales.
Erica Escajeda is a PhD student at the University of Washington. Her research explores environmental changes and baleen whales.
Red tide swamps Florida beaches as they face massive seaweed blob #shorts
Support This Channel To Keep Getting Great Content Daily https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/123todaysnews
Thank you for watching we need for everyone to subscribe comment and like to support this channel for more content!
Is there any content you’ll like to see more of comment below!
You Can Find All Updates Here On this channel About
ukraine news
ukraine russia news
ukraine news today
latest news on ukraine
putin news
russia new
russian news
tom brady news
student loan news
fox news election results
real raw news
f1 news
world news today
us news college rankings
real clear politics
arsenal transfer news
bbc news
deshaun watson news
rt news
sky news
wesh 2 news
hacker news
china news
fox news
news today
ukraine news
news google
cnn news
google news
cnn
y...
published: 19 Mar 2023
Giant Blob Level 2
published: 18 Aug 2021
Boom and Bust in the Bering Sea: The Fate of Crab and Sockeye Salmon in a Warming World
As the world warms, the Bering Sea tells a story of boom and bust. The sockeye salmon runs of Bristol Bay are to be marveled. More than 78.3 million sockeye surged home last summer, filling nets and spawning grounds. The spectacular display came as Alaska salmon runs of chum and chinook once again imploded.
Meanwhile, Bering Sea crab populations have crashed. The snow crab harvest—for the first time ever—has been canceled, and the king crab season was shut down for the second year in a row.
Join Seattle Times reporter Hal Bernton, Anchorage Daily News photojournalist Loren Holmes, and a panel of experts in a discussion of some of the effects of a warming climate on one of the planet’s most productive marine ecosystems.
Meet the panelists:
Robert Foy, director of NOAA’s Alaska Fisheries...
Title: Climate Change & Alaska Marine Ecosystems: Integrated ecosystem research is a powerful tool for understanding the effect of climate change
Speaker: Michael Sigler, PhD, NOAA Retired Fisheries Scientist & Shoals Marine Lab, Bend, OR
EcoFOCI 2021 Spring Seminar Series
This seminar is part of NOAA EcoFOCI (Ecosystems & Fisheries-Oceanography Coordinated Investigations)'s bi-annual seminar series that are focused on the ecosystems of the North Pacific Ocean, Bering Sea and the US Arctic to improve understanding of ecosystem dynamics and applications of that understanding to the management of living marine resources. EcoFOCI is a joint research program between the Alaska Fisheries Science Center (NOAA/ NMFS/ AFSC) and the Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (NOAA/ OAR/ PMEL). Visit...
published: 17 Mar 2021
5 Environmental Issues that Alaska is Facing
Alaska is facing environmental issues and Since 1900, temperatures have risen steadily. Northern and western Alaska warm twice as fast as southeastern Alaska. Most locations have longer growing seasons and shorter snow cover seasons. Extreme weather and climate change have caused environmental changes in Alaska. Warmth, sea ice loss, coastal flooding, river flooding, and ecosystem changes have affected Alaskans. Like temperature, changes in precipitation are regional. The ocean around Alaska is warmer than it's been in 150 years, harming algae, fishing, and human health.
published: 08 Dec 2022
Diomede's Auklets & The 2015/2016 Marine Heatwave - Strait Science April 29, 2021
The Bering Sea experienced a marine heat wave in 2015-2016. During the heatwave, Hector studied the diet and stress hormone levels in crested auklets as well as least auklets on Little Diomede Island. His findings suggested that warming waters affected the marine ecosystem. Come hear the results of his 2016 research and how the auklets fair in this "new normal"
Hector Douglas is an Assistant Professor of Biology at Grambling State University.
Fin whales migrate through the Bering Strait during summer to feed in the Chukchi Sea. How many fin whales and where they occur varies every year. Using underwa...
Fin whales migrate through the Bering Strait during summer to feed in the Chukchi Sea. How many fin whales and where they occur varies every year. Using underwater microphones in the Bering Strait, Erica is trying to determine if changing environmental conditions can explain movements of the fin whales. Hear Erica talk about new information on fin whales.
Erica Escajeda is a PhD student at the University of Washington. Her research explores environmental changes and baleen whales.
Fin whales migrate through the Bering Strait during summer to feed in the Chukchi Sea. How many fin whales and where they occur varies every year. Using underwater microphones in the Bering Strait, Erica is trying to determine if changing environmental conditions can explain movements of the fin whales. Hear Erica talk about new information on fin whales.
Erica Escajeda is a PhD student at the University of Washington. Her research explores environmental changes and baleen whales.
Support This Channel To Keep Getting Great Content Daily https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/123todaysnews
Thank you for watching we need for everyone to subscribe...
Support This Channel To Keep Getting Great Content Daily https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/123todaysnews
Thank you for watching we need for everyone to subscribe comment and like to support this channel for more content!
Is there any content you’ll like to see more of comment below!
You Can Find All Updates Here On this channel About
ukraine news
ukraine russia news
ukraine news today
latest news on ukraine
putin news
russia new
russian news
tom brady news
student loan news
fox news election results
real raw news
f1 news
world news today
us news college rankings
real clear politics
arsenal transfer news
bbc news
deshaun watson news
rt news
sky news
wesh 2 news
hacker news
china news
fox news
news today
ukraine news
news google
cnn news
google news
cnn
yahoo news
breaking news
daily news
bbc news
abc news
latest news
world news
msn news
live news
nfl news
trump news
nbc news
russia news
us news
local news
covid news
nba news
ukraine russia news
Support This Channel To Keep Getting Great Content Daily https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/123todaysnews
Thank you for watching we need for everyone to subscribe comment and like to support this channel for more content!
Is there any content you’ll like to see more of comment below!
You Can Find All Updates Here On this channel About
ukraine news
ukraine russia news
ukraine news today
latest news on ukraine
putin news
russia new
russian news
tom brady news
student loan news
fox news election results
real raw news
f1 news
world news today
us news college rankings
real clear politics
arsenal transfer news
bbc news
deshaun watson news
rt news
sky news
wesh 2 news
hacker news
china news
fox news
news today
ukraine news
news google
cnn news
google news
cnn
yahoo news
breaking news
daily news
bbc news
abc news
latest news
world news
msn news
live news
nfl news
trump news
nbc news
russia news
us news
local news
covid news
nba news
ukraine russia news
As the world warms, the Bering Sea tells a story of boom and bust. The sockeye salmon runs of Bristol Bay are to be marveled. More than 78.3 million sockeye sur...
As the world warms, the Bering Sea tells a story of boom and bust. The sockeye salmon runs of Bristol Bay are to be marveled. More than 78.3 million sockeye surged home last summer, filling nets and spawning grounds. The spectacular display came as Alaska salmon runs of chum and chinook once again imploded.
Meanwhile, Bering Sea crab populations have crashed. The snow crab harvest—for the first time ever—has been canceled, and the king crab season was shut down for the second year in a row.
Join Seattle Times reporter Hal Bernton, Anchorage Daily News photojournalist Loren Holmes, and a panel of experts in a discussion of some of the effects of a warming climate on one of the planet’s most productive marine ecosystems.
Meet the panelists:
Robert Foy, director of NOAA’s Alaska Fisheries Science Center, which has studied the impacts of marine heat waves in the Bering Sea.
Robin Samuelsen, salmon fisherman and a chief on the Curyung Tribal Council. Samuelsen also serves on the board of the Bristol Bay Economic Development Corp., which invests in crab and other Bering Sea fisheries and uses revenue to assist southwest Alaska villagers who want to participate in the summer sockeye harvests.
Katie Howard, a state of Alaska fishery biologist who has studied the decline of Yukon River chinook, and now focuses on salmon’s fate in the oceans.
Daniel Schindler, a University of Washington professor who helps lead the Alaska Salmon Program, and spends his summers studying sockeye in the Wood River drainage of Bristol Bay.
Jamie Goen is executive director for Alaska Bering Sea Crabbers, a nonprofit trade association advocating for crab harvesters.
This event is sponsored by the Anchorage Daily News, The Seattle Times, the Pulitzer Center, and the Anchorage Museum.
As the world warms, the Bering Sea tells a story of boom and bust. The sockeye salmon runs of Bristol Bay are to be marveled. More than 78.3 million sockeye surged home last summer, filling nets and spawning grounds. The spectacular display came as Alaska salmon runs of chum and chinook once again imploded.
Meanwhile, Bering Sea crab populations have crashed. The snow crab harvest—for the first time ever—has been canceled, and the king crab season was shut down for the second year in a row.
Join Seattle Times reporter Hal Bernton, Anchorage Daily News photojournalist Loren Holmes, and a panel of experts in a discussion of some of the effects of a warming climate on one of the planet’s most productive marine ecosystems.
Meet the panelists:
Robert Foy, director of NOAA’s Alaska Fisheries Science Center, which has studied the impacts of marine heat waves in the Bering Sea.
Robin Samuelsen, salmon fisherman and a chief on the Curyung Tribal Council. Samuelsen also serves on the board of the Bristol Bay Economic Development Corp., which invests in crab and other Bering Sea fisheries and uses revenue to assist southwest Alaska villagers who want to participate in the summer sockeye harvests.
Katie Howard, a state of Alaska fishery biologist who has studied the decline of Yukon River chinook, and now focuses on salmon’s fate in the oceans.
Daniel Schindler, a University of Washington professor who helps lead the Alaska Salmon Program, and spends his summers studying sockeye in the Wood River drainage of Bristol Bay.
Jamie Goen is executive director for Alaska Bering Sea Crabbers, a nonprofit trade association advocating for crab harvesters.
This event is sponsored by the Anchorage Daily News, The Seattle Times, the Pulitzer Center, and the Anchorage Museum.
Title: Climate Change & Alaska Marine Ecosystems: Integrated ecosystem research is a powerful tool for understanding the effect of climate change
Speaker: Mich...
Title: Climate Change & Alaska Marine Ecosystems: Integrated ecosystem research is a powerful tool for understanding the effect of climate change
Speaker: Michael Sigler, PhD, NOAA Retired Fisheries Scientist & Shoals Marine Lab, Bend, OR
EcoFOCI 2021 Spring Seminar Series
This seminar is part of NOAA EcoFOCI (Ecosystems & Fisheries-Oceanography Coordinated Investigations)'s bi-annual seminar series that are focused on the ecosystems of the North Pacific Ocean, Bering Sea and the US Arctic to improve understanding of ecosystem dynamics and applications of that understanding to the management of living marine resources. EcoFOCI is a joint research program between the Alaska Fisheries Science Center (NOAA/ NMFS/ AFSC) and the Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (NOAA/ OAR/ PMEL). Visit the EcoFOCI webpage for more information, https://www.ecofoci.noaa.gov/
Title: Climate Change & Alaska Marine Ecosystems: Integrated ecosystem research is a powerful tool for understanding the effect of climate change
Speaker: Michael Sigler, PhD, NOAA Retired Fisheries Scientist & Shoals Marine Lab, Bend, OR
EcoFOCI 2021 Spring Seminar Series
This seminar is part of NOAA EcoFOCI (Ecosystems & Fisheries-Oceanography Coordinated Investigations)'s bi-annual seminar series that are focused on the ecosystems of the North Pacific Ocean, Bering Sea and the US Arctic to improve understanding of ecosystem dynamics and applications of that understanding to the management of living marine resources. EcoFOCI is a joint research program between the Alaska Fisheries Science Center (NOAA/ NMFS/ AFSC) and the Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (NOAA/ OAR/ PMEL). Visit the EcoFOCI webpage for more information, https://www.ecofoci.noaa.gov/
Alaska is facing environmental issues and Since 1900, temperatures have risen steadily. Northern and western Alaska warm twice as fast as southeastern Alaska. M...
Alaska is facing environmental issues and Since 1900, temperatures have risen steadily. Northern and western Alaska warm twice as fast as southeastern Alaska. Most locations have longer growing seasons and shorter snow cover seasons. Extreme weather and climate change have caused environmental changes in Alaska. Warmth, sea ice loss, coastal flooding, river flooding, and ecosystem changes have affected Alaskans. Like temperature, changes in precipitation are regional. The ocean around Alaska is warmer than it's been in 150 years, harming algae, fishing, and human health.
Alaska is facing environmental issues and Since 1900, temperatures have risen steadily. Northern and western Alaska warm twice as fast as southeastern Alaska. Most locations have longer growing seasons and shorter snow cover seasons. Extreme weather and climate change have caused environmental changes in Alaska. Warmth, sea ice loss, coastal flooding, river flooding, and ecosystem changes have affected Alaskans. Like temperature, changes in precipitation are regional. The ocean around Alaska is warmer than it's been in 150 years, harming algae, fishing, and human health.
The Bering Sea experienced a marine heat wave in 2015-2016. During the heatwave, Hector studied the diet and stress hormone levels in crested auklets as well as...
The Bering Sea experienced a marine heat wave in 2015-2016. During the heatwave, Hector studied the diet and stress hormone levels in crested auklets as well as least auklets on Little Diomede Island. His findings suggested that warming waters affected the marine ecosystem. Come hear the results of his 2016 research and how the auklets fair in this "new normal"
Hector Douglas is an Assistant Professor of Biology at Grambling State University.
The Bering Sea experienced a marine heat wave in 2015-2016. During the heatwave, Hector studied the diet and stress hormone levels in crested auklets as well as least auklets on Little Diomede Island. His findings suggested that warming waters affected the marine ecosystem. Come hear the results of his 2016 research and how the auklets fair in this "new normal"
Hector Douglas is an Assistant Professor of Biology at Grambling State University.
This looks like a lot of fun! Welcome back everyone, today's video is on the top five biggest blob launches!
Several segments are licensed under Creative Commons (CC)
Zbigniew Matuszczyk (CC)
The Top Fives channel brings you informational and entertaining top five videos from around the world. Join us and subscribe for more.
Follow us on Facebook!
https://facebook.com/topfivesyoutube
published: 31 Jul 2018
The Blob (1958) VS.The Blob (1988) - Rental Reviews
Thanks to Drop for sponsoring this episode. Get the PC37x here! https://dro.ps/cinemassacre-pc37x-2
It's a Blob VS. Blob showdown at "Cinemassacre Video 2" today. The Blob (1958) was a drive-in favorite, this sci-fi classic follows teenagers Steve (Steven McQueen) and his best girl, Jane (Aneta Corseaut), as they try to protect their hometown from a gelatinous alien life form that engulfs everything it touches. 30 years later, in 1988, a remake was created. In that film, in a tiny California town, high school students discover a strange, gelatinous substance that melts the flesh of any living creatures in its path. So basically the same thing, just expanded. Get it? Expanded? Like THE BLOB???!
Follow us on Twitter:
James - https://twitter.com/cinemassacre
Justin - https://twitter.com/Jus...
This looks like a lot of fun! Welcome back everyone, today's video is on the top five biggest blob launches!
Several segments are licensed under Creative Comm...
This looks like a lot of fun! Welcome back everyone, today's video is on the top five biggest blob launches!
Several segments are licensed under Creative Commons (CC)
Zbigniew Matuszczyk (CC)
The Top Fives channel brings you informational and entertaining top five videos from around the world. Join us and subscribe for more.
Follow us on Facebook!
https://facebook.com/topfivesyoutube
This looks like a lot of fun! Welcome back everyone, today's video is on the top five biggest blob launches!
Several segments are licensed under Creative Commons (CC)
Zbigniew Matuszczyk (CC)
The Top Fives channel brings you informational and entertaining top five videos from around the world. Join us and subscribe for more.
Follow us on Facebook!
https://facebook.com/topfivesyoutube
Thanks to Drop for sponsoring this episode. Get the PC37x here! https://dro.ps/cinemassacre-pc37x-2
It's a Blob VS. Blob showdown at "Cinemassacre Video 2" tod...
Thanks to Drop for sponsoring this episode. Get the PC37x here! https://dro.ps/cinemassacre-pc37x-2
It's a Blob VS. Blob showdown at "Cinemassacre Video 2" today. The Blob (1958) was a drive-in favorite, this sci-fi classic follows teenagers Steve (Steven McQueen) and his best girl, Jane (Aneta Corseaut), as they try to protect their hometown from a gelatinous alien life form that engulfs everything it touches. 30 years later, in 1988, a remake was created. In that film, in a tiny California town, high school students discover a strange, gelatinous substance that melts the flesh of any living creatures in its path. So basically the same thing, just expanded. Get it? Expanded? Like THE BLOB???!
Follow us on Twitter:
James - https://twitter.com/cinemassacre
Justin - https://twitter.com/JustySilverman
Kieran - https://twitter.com/Kieeeeern
Tony - https://twitter.com/HacktheMovies
#TheBlob #RentalReviews #Cinemassacre #BlobVSBlob #MonsterMadness
Thanks to Drop for sponsoring this episode. Get the PC37x here! https://dro.ps/cinemassacre-pc37x-2
It's a Blob VS. Blob showdown at "Cinemassacre Video 2" today. The Blob (1958) was a drive-in favorite, this sci-fi classic follows teenagers Steve (Steven McQueen) and his best girl, Jane (Aneta Corseaut), as they try to protect their hometown from a gelatinous alien life form that engulfs everything it touches. 30 years later, in 1988, a remake was created. In that film, in a tiny California town, high school students discover a strange, gelatinous substance that melts the flesh of any living creatures in its path. So basically the same thing, just expanded. Get it? Expanded? Like THE BLOB???!
Follow us on Twitter:
James - https://twitter.com/cinemassacre
Justin - https://twitter.com/JustySilverman
Kieran - https://twitter.com/Kieeeeern
Tony - https://twitter.com/HacktheMovies
#TheBlob #RentalReviews #Cinemassacre #BlobVSBlob #MonsterMadness
Fin whales migrate through the Bering Strait during summer to feed in the Chukchi Sea. How many fin whales and where they occur varies every year. Using underwater microphones in the Bering Strait, Erica is trying to determine if changing environmental conditions can explain movements of the fin whales. Hear Erica talk about new information on fin whales.
Erica Escajeda is a PhD student at the University of Washington. Her research explores environmental changes and baleen whales.
Support This Channel To Keep Getting Great Content Daily https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/123todaysnews
Thank you for watching we need for everyone to subscribe comment and like to support this channel for more content!
Is there any content you’ll like to see more of comment below!
You Can Find All Updates Here On this channel About
ukraine news
ukraine russia news
ukraine news today
latest news on ukraine
putin news
russia new
russian news
tom brady news
student loan news
fox news election results
real raw news
f1 news
world news today
us news college rankings
real clear politics
arsenal transfer news
bbc news
deshaun watson news
rt news
sky news
wesh 2 news
hacker news
china news
fox news
news today
ukraine news
news google
cnn news
google news
cnn
yahoo news
breaking news
daily news
bbc news
abc news
latest news
world news
msn news
live news
nfl news
trump news
nbc news
russia news
us news
local news
covid news
nba news
ukraine russia news
As the world warms, the Bering Sea tells a story of boom and bust. The sockeye salmon runs of Bristol Bay are to be marveled. More than 78.3 million sockeye surged home last summer, filling nets and spawning grounds. The spectacular display came as Alaska salmon runs of chum and chinook once again imploded.
Meanwhile, Bering Sea crab populations have crashed. The snow crab harvest—for the first time ever—has been canceled, and the king crab season was shut down for the second year in a row.
Join Seattle Times reporter Hal Bernton, Anchorage Daily News photojournalist Loren Holmes, and a panel of experts in a discussion of some of the effects of a warming climate on one of the planet’s most productive marine ecosystems.
Meet the panelists:
Robert Foy, director of NOAA’s Alaska Fisheries Science Center, which has studied the impacts of marine heat waves in the Bering Sea.
Robin Samuelsen, salmon fisherman and a chief on the Curyung Tribal Council. Samuelsen also serves on the board of the Bristol Bay Economic Development Corp., which invests in crab and other Bering Sea fisheries and uses revenue to assist southwest Alaska villagers who want to participate in the summer sockeye harvests.
Katie Howard, a state of Alaska fishery biologist who has studied the decline of Yukon River chinook, and now focuses on salmon’s fate in the oceans.
Daniel Schindler, a University of Washington professor who helps lead the Alaska Salmon Program, and spends his summers studying sockeye in the Wood River drainage of Bristol Bay.
Jamie Goen is executive director for Alaska Bering Sea Crabbers, a nonprofit trade association advocating for crab harvesters.
This event is sponsored by the Anchorage Daily News, The Seattle Times, the Pulitzer Center, and the Anchorage Museum.
Title: Climate Change & Alaska Marine Ecosystems: Integrated ecosystem research is a powerful tool for understanding the effect of climate change
Speaker: Michael Sigler, PhD, NOAA Retired Fisheries Scientist & Shoals Marine Lab, Bend, OR
EcoFOCI 2021 Spring Seminar Series
This seminar is part of NOAA EcoFOCI (Ecosystems & Fisheries-Oceanography Coordinated Investigations)'s bi-annual seminar series that are focused on the ecosystems of the North Pacific Ocean, Bering Sea and the US Arctic to improve understanding of ecosystem dynamics and applications of that understanding to the management of living marine resources. EcoFOCI is a joint research program between the Alaska Fisheries Science Center (NOAA/ NMFS/ AFSC) and the Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (NOAA/ OAR/ PMEL). Visit the EcoFOCI webpage for more information, https://www.ecofoci.noaa.gov/
Alaska is facing environmental issues and Since 1900, temperatures have risen steadily. Northern and western Alaska warm twice as fast as southeastern Alaska. Most locations have longer growing seasons and shorter snow cover seasons. Extreme weather and climate change have caused environmental changes in Alaska. Warmth, sea ice loss, coastal flooding, river flooding, and ecosystem changes have affected Alaskans. Like temperature, changes in precipitation are regional. The ocean around Alaska is warmer than it's been in 150 years, harming algae, fishing, and human health.
The Bering Sea experienced a marine heat wave in 2015-2016. During the heatwave, Hector studied the diet and stress hormone levels in crested auklets as well as least auklets on Little Diomede Island. His findings suggested that warming waters affected the marine ecosystem. Come hear the results of his 2016 research and how the auklets fair in this "new normal"
Hector Douglas is an Assistant Professor of Biology at Grambling State University.
A meteorite crashes near Arborville, California. An elderly transient discovers, within the sphere, a massive slime mold-like substance (the Blob) that attaches itself to his hand. Three high school students, Brian, Meg and Paul, take him to a hospital. After Brian leaves, Paul witnesses the lower half of the transient melting from exposure to the Blob. As he calls for help, the Blob drops on top of him. Meg arrives to see Paul being devoured by the growing Blob. While she tries to free him, his arm dissolves off, Meg is thrown against a wall and knocked unconscious, and the Blob oozes out of the hospital.
This looks like a lot of fun! Welcome back everyone, today's video is on the top five biggest blob launches!
Several segments are licensed under Creative Commons (CC)
Zbigniew Matuszczyk (CC)
The Top Fives channel brings you informational and entertaining top five videos from around the world. Join us and subscribe for more.
Follow us on Facebook!
https://facebook.com/topfivesyoutube
Thanks to Drop for sponsoring this episode. Get the PC37x here! https://dro.ps/cinemassacre-pc37x-2
It's a Blob VS. Blob showdown at "Cinemassacre Video 2" today. The Blob (1958) was a drive-in favorite, this sci-fi classic follows teenagers Steve (Steven McQueen) and his best girl, Jane (Aneta Corseaut), as they try to protect their hometown from a gelatinous alien life form that engulfs everything it touches. 30 years later, in 1988, a remake was created. In that film, in a tiny California town, high school students discover a strange, gelatinous substance that melts the flesh of any living creatures in its path. So basically the same thing, just expanded. Get it? Expanded? Like THE BLOB???!
Follow us on Twitter:
James - https://twitter.com/cinemassacre
Justin - https://twitter.com/JustySilverman
Kieran - https://twitter.com/Kieeeeern
Tony - https://twitter.com/HacktheMovies
#TheBlob #RentalReviews #Cinemassacre #BlobVSBlob #MonsterMadness