An Overview of the Arctic 

Filed under: ocean on Saturday, August 30th, 2008 by admin | No Comments

The Arctic is located at the top of Planet Earth, the location of the North Pole and rumored home a certain Santa Clause. Here’s an overview of the Arctic.

Long thought to be a continent covered in ice like Antarctica, we now know the Arctic is a small land mass covered by ice that spreads well out from the land. Put another way, the area is mostly a giant flow of ice. It is so large, it is four times the size of Texas. As has been reported in the news recently, it is melting at a fairly alarming rate.

66-33 is the magic number. Everything above it is considered the Arctic Circle, which puts parts of countries such as Russia and Canada within the circle. Greenland is included in this group, an island covered in over one mile thick slabs of ice.

The Arctic Ocean surrounds and submerges under the massive ice flow. Although the ocean is the smallest in the world, roughly eight percent the size of the Pacific, more fish live in it and along the edges than in any other ocean.

Although Antarctica and the Arctic seem similar at first glance, they are strikingly different. The Arctic has animals, plants and people living on it throughout the year. Antarctica has none of these things with the exception of penguins, which bread on the ice in Antarctica. Whereas Antarctica is nearly always below freezing, temperatures in the Arctic can get as high a 50 degrees Fahrenheit in the summer. Of course, they plunge far into the negatives in the winter, but why quibble.

Surprising to many, the Arctic receives very little snow from the atmosphere. Total precipitation for the year averages only 8 inches. This makes the current melting of the ice flow somewhat troubling. In the last two decades, the Arctic has lost over six percent of the ice flow to melting. The amorphous greenhouse gases and global warming are blamed or refuted depending on your particular point of view. What isn’t debated, however, is the climatic impact of all this new water.

The oceans of the Earth are actually one body of water. Through this body of water flows a monstrously long current known as the Conveyer. This current controls climates because it circles the entire globe and brings warm water to areas that would otherwise be very cold. The warm water stabilizes and warms the climate in such places as Europe. Nobody is exactly sure how much fresh water is being added by the melting of the Arctic, but recent evidence shows it is negatively impacting the conveyor.

The nature of the conveyer is beyond this article, but the massive fresh water is slowing it down. Recent evidence shows it may have lost up to 40 percent of its pace. If it stops or reverses, which has occurred numerous times in the history of the planet, climates will change all over the world. These changes would occur quickly, often within five to ten years. Temperatures in Europe would drop 20 degrees, while other areas would see wild swings as well. Hurricanes and such would appear in unexpected areas and be much stronger than we currently see. Put another way, our relatively calm climate would become a bit more aggressive.

The Arctic is generally out of sight out of mind unless they see a documentary. If it continues to melt, people are going to learn more about it than they ever imagined.

Richard Monk is with FactsMonk.com - a site with facts about everything. Visit us to read more about continents and Arctic Facts.

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Ocean Affiliates - Riding the Crest of a New Wave in Online Marketing 

Filed under: ocean on Thursday, May 8th, 2008 by admin | No Comments

Internet ’surfers’, as those who visit websites are termed, know no boundaries except those imposed by language and choice. Whilst most affiliate networks and some merchants find this idea difficult to assimilate, Ocean Affiliates has grasped the concept and is developing a network for the 21st century, offering advertisers and Internet marketers the opportunity to work together wherever such a partnership is potentially profitable, regardless of the physical location of either.

A website built and maintained in one country may have a predominance of visitors from an entirely different continent. An advertiser based on one continent may have existing or potential markets in several other countries. Whilst some affiliate networks, developed to handle advertisers and affiliates in a single country, are struggling to adapt, Ocean Affiliates is striding confidently in the right direction.

The Ocean Affiliates network provides an excellent opportunity for web publishers with sites aimed at more than one English-speaking country to find products and services that they can offer to their visitors as a means of earning income. Nonetheless, a webmaster who only wants to be affiliated with merchants in a single country will find an array of choices to suit most sites and merchants who prefer to stick with their geographic population will find plenty of willing affiliates.

Some affiliate marketers prefer to work with a single network and Ocean Affiliates is constantly sourcing new and diverse opportunities in each country. Others, used to having to work with up to a dozen different networks, each filling a particular set of requirements, are becoming aware that Ocean Affiliates has the advantage over most of them and may eventually make it unnecessary to work with so many different entities.

The advantages of partnering through Ocean Affiliates do not end there, either. Some networks leave communication with affiliates entirely up to the advertisers who have partnered with them. This can result in an inbox crammed with the daily equivalent of a ton of ’spam’, as individual merchants with sufficient time or manpower to do so, bombard their marketing partners with exhortations to sell more of their particular product.

Whilst the opportunity for occasional, or even regular, dialogue between affiliate and advertiser can be a good thing, the system adopted by Ocean Affiliates is a far better one.

Affiliates receive regular updates on new campaigns as they become available and links are provided via e-mail, making it possible to participate immediately. This system ensures that affiliates are aware of opportunities as soon as they exist and that advertisers are not overlooked by potential marketing partners, leaving both free to get on with what they do best.

For those who are new to affiliate marketing, whether as website publishers or as merchants, Ocean Affiliates offers the support needed, and this willingness to help newcomers, or ‘newbies’ as they are affectionately termed, is one of the features that sets Ocean Affiliates apart and assure a bright future for all concerned.

Online since 1998 as a webmaster,working mainly with small businesses and freelance tradesmen, Linnet Woods is editor of MarineZine, a free online nautical magazine, is active on several work-related forums and has more than a dozen sites at http://www.linnetwoods.com.

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