Sakura no hanami (桜の華見) "cherry blossom viewing" on @maynoothuniversity.ie campus.
Posts by Gerard McCarthy
A problem with social media is the paradox of connection, where connections are abundant but ultimately not very deep. In order to know someone well you need to spend time with them often, ideally the old-fashioned way, by turning them into an animal familiar cursed to accompany you for all eternity
That sounds class!
First paper led by our @climatecocentre.bsky.social PhD student Yongyao has gone to open review. Blown away that after just 12 months she has a first paper submitted. egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/20... @edhawkins.org @germac.bsky.social
A person in a yellow waterproof jacket holds a vertical rope densely covered with mussels, suspended over a misty body of water. Multiple mussel-covered ropes hang nearby, indicating a mussel farming operation. The foggy background reveals a distant shoreline, suggesting a coastal aquaculture setting.
🦤🌐🧪
Irish blue mussels have declined over 30 years with changing sea surface temperatures and cold periods affecting health. Reduced tissue weight and higher moisture dominate, while higher local chlorophyll helps mussels thrive.
bit.ly/meps15054
@germac.bsky.social
@samantha-hallam.bsky.social
I promise it wasn't I gave it the 1 star review:
Great Channel 4 News report on the latest #AMOC monitoring.
"Trouble is: there is now growing scientific consensus that the AMOC is weakening."
@noc.ac.uk
youtu.be/JpOpsMOBsL4?...
Amazing! Well done
Great, incredibly fast work here from the WasItUs team at ICARUS Maynooth @clairebergin.bsky.social and @lionel-swan.bsky.social looking at flooding from storm Chandra.
www.rte.ie/news/environ...
🌊📊 Developing reliable #ocean #indicators is essential to guide global action and protect the ocean's future.
🤝 A new study lays the groundwork for a global framework of ocean indicators, connecting #science to #policy and action. Open access here: www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Today is 2025-12-14, the sun sets at 16:05:45 and the grand auld stretch tonight was 00 mins and 02 secs. #GrandStretch #TheGrandStretchIsBack
Today is 2025-12-12, the sun sets at 16:05:44 and the grand auld stretch tonight was 00 mins and 1 sec. #GrandStretch #GrandDrawingIn
Collage of prints from my site #SpéirGorm #SpéirGhorm #Ireland
One of the handwritten gift notes that I can include for free with all orders, if desired.
First year selling my art at Christmas without the Other site, where most of my sales came from, as well as losing US orders to new tariffs, so it'll be a tough one - I put huge work into every order, so even if you can't buy, shares help get them in front of eyes. GRMA! www.ciaraioch.com/artprints
“I am so bored by AI. One of the things I love about the theatre is AI can’t do it.”
Ethan Hawke is a dude 👌🏻
Interesting piece from @thinkorswim.bsky.social on AMOC collapse and its potential implications for Ireland. Not sure about the headline but big AMOC change would certainly be transformative for Ireland www.irishexaminer.com/opinion/comm...
Meet the Co-Chairs Leading AMOC in Focus
Introducing Hans Pörtner and Gerard McCarthy as the Co-Chairs of the newly launched Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) Report—AMOC in Focus, a joint assessment by JPI Climate and JPI Oceans.
www.linkedin.com/posts/jpi-oc...
I've heard this was very good—do you have a way to look back at this?
You’ve been kidnapped. The characters from the last TV show you watched are trying to rescue you. Who’s coming to save you?
An image of Taghmon Church from Wikipedia <a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Taghmon_Church-_St._Munnas_Church,_County_Westmeath.JPG">Image</a> licensed under <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0" >CC BY-SA 4.0</a? by <a href="//commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Bridget_Neville&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="User:Bridget Neville (page does not exist)">Bridget Neville</a>
An image of Taghmon Church from Wikipedia <a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Taghmon_Church-_St._Munnas_Church,_County_Westmeath.JPG">Image</a> licensed under <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0" >CC BY-SA 4.0</a? by <a href="//commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Bridget_Neville&action=edit&redlink=1" class="new" title="User:Bridget Neville (page does not exist)">Bridget Neville</a>
A partially zoomed out map with a pin at the position of St Munna's Church, L1618, County Westmeath, Ireland
A zoomed in map showing a pin at the position of St Munna's Church, L1618, County Westmeath, Ireland
🇮🇪 - St Munna's Church, L1618, County Westmeath, Ireland
#Ireland
#StepByStep 👣
#PlacesOfWorship
Want to visit? 🔁
1/6
Delira do Becky Ní Éallaithe as ucht Steip 2025 a bhuachaint. About time!
I'm reading the Parable of the Talents at the moment and having lots of 'did I read that in the book or in the news?' moments.
We were all brought together under iCRAG—the Research Ireland Centre for Applied Geosciences (www.icrag-centre.org). It was nice writing with a multidisciplinary group like this.
What is going on with the AMOC - the system of ocean currents that gives Ireland its mild and wet climate? With a number of iCRAG colleagues we wrote a short piece for @rtebrainstorm.bsky.social ➡️
www.rte.ie/brainstorm/2...
Up on RTÉ Brainstorm now, together with colleagues Audrey Morley, @tomasbuitendijk.bsky.social, Chris Bean, an article we wrote on the AMOC (gulfstreamsystem, as Joyce would have said) that spans social science, current and past climates and emerging observing: www.rte.ie/brainstorm/2...
Yay! feel very conflicted about what I want from that storm now. Devastation is obviously bad but don't want it to be a woos either.
That would be really interesting. Somebody must have done experiments on Atlantic circulation with the Med open and closed too I guess. It's an important question to know how much extra deep warming in the Atlantic is due to AMOC and has implications for GMST
Definitely thinking of your work @janzika.bsky.social when thinking of ocean vertical heat transport.
I often come back to the Atlantic being warmer than the Pacific at depth. At shallower depths, it seems obvious that the warm water is coming from the Med. But also the vertical heat transport due to overturning processes needs to be remembered. Anyone know of study partitioning those two processes?
sounds sketchy!