I'm assuming you mean a person who studies old things from the past, there is such a thing as a marin archaeologist -- also known as an "underwater archaelogist" They usually end up studying shipwrecks, such as the Titanic, or submerged cities. They require a slightly different skill set from regular archaelogists, and require much more equipment, such as Scuba gear or submarines so as to be able to get to the site in question.
For anything
no marines fight in ground
Anything but typical.
The phrase "Marine" is commonly used as a salt water term; but technically refers to anything living in, on, around, or having anything to do with a body of water.
anything it wanted to........ basicly all of the marine animals.
you cant kill any marine life, pollute the water or fish within the reserve. you also cant hurt or move anything inside the marine reserve.
Marine Biology is studied because we want to know more things about marine mammals and fish. Also to get to know the eco-system and the life of fish. With-out marine biology we will not know anything about the ocean and what lies beneath it.
fossils are something like a plant or bone preserved in rock, then when the preserved thing finally decays there is an impression left in the rock. marine fossils are marine animals, plants, or shells (basically anything in the water, hence marine) that are now fossils.
The best time to collect marine organisms is when it is low tide. If it is high tide there wouldnt be anything washed ashore
Marine Corps recruits should take around $20, their photo identification and nothing more with them to boot camp.
A marine biologist works to determine how marine life organisms get food, reproduce, develop, why certain groups of organisms live in certain parts of the ocean, and how they interact with other organisms in the ocean.
Marine biologist's study everything from algae to the largest whale. Basically anything in the ocean, living or not they will study.