Science
Related: About this forumCool science word: Euxinia.
I came across this word, which was new to me, in the title of this paper: Long-Term Euxinia Restricts Microbial Methane Removal in Eutrophic Coastal Basins Jessica Venetz, Nicky Dotsios, Olga M. Żygadłowska, Wytze K. Lenstra, Niels A.G.M van Helmond, Christoph Humborg, Katherine D. McMahon, Dina in t Zandt, Caroline P. Slomp, Mike S. M. Jetten, and Annelies J. Veraart Environmental Science & Technology 2025 59 (41), 21988-22000.
Apparently the world was coined by paleogeologists to describe the pre-oxygenated world before the evolution of photosynthesis.
It refers to conditions of highly sulfidic waters exhibiting oxygen depletion (or absence, in the palaeogeological sense).
The paper is free to read, and refers to issues in stratification of seas.
From the text:
Have a nice weekend.
markodochartaigh
(4,492 posts)From the great, old robertscribbler blog:
https://robertscribbler.wordpress.com/2015/08/28/shades-of-a-canfield-ocean-hydrogen-sulfide-in-oregons-purple-waves/
Bernardo de La Paz
(59,822 posts)archaic name for the Black Sea, from Latin Pontus Euxinus, from Greek Pontos Euxenios, literally "the hospitable sea," a euphemism for Pontos Axeinos, "the inhospitable sea." From eu- "good, well" (see eu-) + xenos "host; guest; stranger" (from PIE root *ghos-ti- "stranger, guest, host" ).
Notice how "eu" also shows up in "euphemism" (good talk) in the definition and in "eutrophic" (accumulating nutrients) in the title.