
Long Now Melody Jue: Ocean Memory
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Apr 9, 2026 Melody Jue, a media scholar and scuba diver who studies environmental media and the sensory politics of seawater, explores how the ocean stores memory in sea ice, microbes, corals, and whale song. She describes translating chemosensation into sound, deterritorializing human senses, and artful projects that make underwater smell and memory perceptible to us.
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Sea Ice As Microbial Memory Store
- Sea ice and its briny channels act as a storage facility for microbial "memory agents" that can be released when ice melts and travel far from origin.
- Jodi Deming frames sea ice as porous scaffolding where microbes retain genes and histories useful across time and space.
Deep Pacific Holds Little Ice Age Heat Signature
- The ocean itself can record climate history: thermal anomalies from the Little Ice Age persist in deep Pacific waters today.
- Surface temperature trends sink into depth, creating an ongoing present effect, not just a proxy in sediment cores.
Collective Memory Across Ocean Species
- Ocean memory can be collective and distributed across species, from whale songs to lateral gene transfer among microbes.
- Some microbes retain ancient genes from pre-Great Oxygenation times, like biological 'preppers' keeping costly traits just in case.










