Film Showing: 'The Last Ocean,' Jan. 24

by Michelle Saport  |   

Friday, Jan. 24, 6:30-8 p.m. ConocoPhillips Integrated Science Building, Room 120

Biological Sciences graduate student Amy Kirkham will host a public film showing of "The Last Ocean."

About the film: The Ross Sea, Antarctica, is the most pristine stretch of ocean on Earth. A vast, frozen landscape that teems with life-whales, seals and penguins carving out a place on the very edge of existence.

California ecologist David Ainley has been traveling to the Ross Sea to study this unique ecosystem for more than 30 years. He has written scientific papers describing it as a "living laboratory." Largely untouched by humans, it is one of the last places where the delicate balance of nature prevails. But an international fishing fleet has recently found its way to the Ross Sea. It is targeting Antarctic toothfish, sold as Chilean sea bass in up-market restaurants around the world.

The catch is so lucrative it is known as white gold. Ainley knows that unless fishing is stopped the natural balance of the Ross Sea will be lost forever. He rallies his fellow scientists and meets up with a Colorado nature photographer and New Zealand filmmaker who also share a deep passion for this remote corner of the world. Together they form "The Last Ocean" and begin a campaign to take on the commercial fishers and governments in a race to protect Earth's last untouched ocean from our insatiable appetite for fish.

Creative Commons License "Film Showing: 'The Last Ocean,' Jan. 24" is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
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