HOME > Newsletter  > 2009  > No.204
Newsletter

No.204

  February 05, 2009
How a Man Far from the Sea Came to Write an Ocean Trilogy
Yoichi Komori
Author/ Recipient, first annual Prize for Promotion of Japan as an Ocean State
Chemosynthetic Microorganisms and their Role in the Marine Environment
Michinari Sunamura
Associate Professor, Department of Earth and Planetary Science, Graduate School of Science, The University of Tokyo
Bodhidharma and the Silk Road of the Sea
Tsutomu Kambe
Former Professor, The University of Tokyo / Member, Board of Governors, nstitute of Asian Studies (Chennai, India)

How a Man Far from the Sea Came to Write an Ocean Trilogy

Yoichi Komori
Author/ Recipient, first annual Prize for Promotion of Japan as an Ocean State

I never really had an interest in the ocean, but I was captivated by what I learned from the Coast Guard officers I met. Forced boarding, Large Patrol Vessel, Dive Officer, heli-rescue: these were new terms to me, but they were all tinged with excitement. If I had grown up with a love of the sea, perhaps my ocean trilogy of Umizaru (The Sea Monkey), Tokkyu, and Wa ga Na wa Umishi(My Name is Sea Master) would never have been born.

Chemosynthetic Microorganisms and their Role in the Marine Environment

Michinari Sunamura
Associate Professor, Department of Earth and Planetary Science, Graduate School of Science, The University of Tokyo

There can be found more than ten thousand species of microorganisms in just a few liters of seawater. There is great diversity among microorganisms, with some species capable of producing organic material from carbon dioxide and others capable of chemosynthesis and photosynthesis. Microorganisms with genetic instructions capable of making heavy metals insoluble have been discovered in plumes from thermal vents: just another example of how discoveries of new bio-planetary chemical functions might be found among microorganisms in the marine environment in the future.

Bodhidharma and the Silk Road of the Sea

Tsutomu Kambe
Former Professor, The University of Tokyo / Member, Board of Governors, nstitute of Asian Studies (Chennai, India)

The sea route taken from India to China by Bodhidharma, the founder of Chinese Zen Buddhism, is not known in detail, but I would like to here offer my own theory regarding the possibility of his having followed the maritime Silk Road. The Indian Ocean was an active trade route between India and China long before the birth of Christ, and undoubtedly Bodhidharma traveled the same route. A new project honoring the great teacher is now being planned in India.

 

Top  
The "Ship & Ocean Foundation" is operating under the name of "Ocean Policy Research Foundation." This website is published by the support of The Nippon Foundation.
©Ocean Policy Research Foundation. All rights reserved.