Welcome to the third issue of the Tula Quarterly! (Yes, it’s a quarterly that only comes out three times a year—we like to be a little eclectic.) Some highlights from this issue:
Videographer Toby Hall talks about seeing egg-laying skates and a rare giant phantom jelly on the NorthEast Pacific Deep-Sea Exploration Project expedition
Ethnobiologist Chelsey Geralda Armstrong’s new paper—with findings assisted by Hakai Institute genomics researchers—confirms that Indigenous people were cultivating the landscape in British Columbia for thousands of years
Researchers are starting to identify DNA from marine sediment cores extracted from Barkley Canyon, 2,000 meters below the ocean’s surface
This issue’s cover is once again by illustrator Mercedes Minck—inspired by the Hakai geospatial team and the Airborne Coastal Observatory, which appear in two stories in this issue: “Connecting the Dots” and “When a Landslide Unleashes a Flood of Geospatial Data.”