He then tried fishing out of Terokar with success and I handed in the daily and was able to fish as normal. We both had however caught the daily fish after a few casts and returned to getting nothing. I found this out in Terokar while doing the Blackfin Darter daily, I thought it was addons but had a conversation with another player with different addons, both of us disabling and re enabling but having the same problem. At first you may get nothing atall and blame addons but when you get the daily fish and hand in you can fish as normal. One of the easiest Dailys in the game, requires no killing, almost no travel, and since both lakes are near a guarded area, Garadar or the Consortium post, almost no risk of PVP death.Ĭomment by 74836I may be way off the mark here but it looks like after 3.0.8 probably to get over the old crafty exploitation (maybe code was too complex to undo so adding more might have been easier) While you are on a fishing daily you can only catch the daily fish in the area for that daily. the regular mudfish, and the bluefish are keeping my guild stocked with +20 agil/spirit and +23 spell damage/+20 spirit buff foods. I've done every one of the fishing quests at least once so far, this one about 6 times, and it's never taken me more then 1 lure.Īlso. you either forgot to actually accept the quest, were not in the right zone, or you were not catching anything because of a low skill. If you went through more then 1 lure and didn't catch it. while on the quest, I usualy catch it by the 30th cast, usualy about 5-8 minutes. I use the 'fishing buddy' addon, which tracks casts and catch percentages. Yes, you need to be in one of the 2 lakes, none of the rivers count. fortunatly the daily fishing quests give almost unlimited supply of +100 lures. Outside of Thwaites, you can find Icefin monitoring the ecosystems within ice-oceans around Antarctica’s McMurdo research station, or helping astrobiologists understand how life came to be in ocean worlds and their biospheres.Comment by NighteyesI have a base fishing 400 (375+25 pole) and get 'fish got away' messages in nagarand. “It’s showing us that this system is very complex and requires a rethinking of how the ocean is melting the ice, especially in a location like Thwaites.” “Icefin is collecting data as close to the ice as possible in locations no other tool can currently reach,” Peter Washam, a research scientist from Cornell University who led analysis of Icefin data used to calculate melt rates, said in a press release. These new insights, as foreboding as they are, may improve older models that have been used to predict the changes in Thwaites, and in the rates of possible sea level rise if it collapses. Additionally, the shapes of certain crevasses in the ice are helping funnel in warm ocean currents, making sections of the glacier melt faster than previously expected. Data gathered by Icefin, and analyzed by human researchers, showed that the glacier had retreated up the ocean floor, thinning at the base, and melting outwards quickly. In 2020, through a nearly 2,000-foot-deep borehole drilled in the ice, Icefin ventured out across the ocean to the critical point where the Thwaites Glacier joins the Amundsen Sea and the ice starts to float. Its journey is part of the International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration (ITGC), which includes other radars, sensors, and vehicles like Boaty McBoatface. Researchers can remotely control Icefin’s trajectory, or let it set off on its own. Since Icefin is modular, it can be broken down, customized, and reassembled according to the needs of the mission. Its range is impressive: It can go down to depths of 3,280 feet and squeeze through narrow cavities in the ice shelf. It comes equipped with HD cameras, laser ranging systems, sonar, doppler current profilers, single beam altimeters (to measure distance), and instruments for measuring salinity, temperature, dissolved oxygen, pH, and organic matter. This robot is capable of characterizing below-ice environments using the suite of sensors that it carries. But it has since found a new home at Cornell University. The torpedo-like Icefin was first developed at Georgia Tech, and the first prototype of the robot dates back to 2014. By way of two papers published this week in the journal Nature, Icefin has been providing pertinent details regarding the conditions beneath the freezing waters. Efforts are afoot to understand the geometry and chemistry of Thwaites, which is about the size of Florida, in order to gauge the impact that warming waters and climate change may have on it.Īn 11-foot tube-like underwater robot called Icefin is offering us a detailed look deep under the ice at how the vulnerable ice shelf in Antarctica is melting. Thwaites, a notoriously unstable glacier in western Antarctica, is cracking and disintegrating, spelling bad news for sea level rise across the globe.
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