Archive for November, 2007

Sea ice

Friday, November 30th, 2007

Arctic ice, both sea and land, has been in the news quite a lot lately and I expect we’ll hear more about it once the world’s leading ice scientists present at AGU in a few weeks. however, in the last few days I’ve come across two really interesting things.

The first was a seminar from the American Meteorological Society featuring research talks from Scott Luthcke, Mark Serreze, and Konrad Steffen. The streaming video is currently available here, but I don’t know how long that will be online. The main page for the seminar is here. Links to the slides from each speaker are here and that’s a cool resource to have. The bottom line is that the rates of melt (loss of area and thickness) on sea and land are blowing everybody away – and these scientists are talking increasingly about tipping points in the arctic in terms of ice melt. Big stuff for sure.

The other thing that caught my attention was a broadcast of the BBC program One Planet on the Northwest Passage. Here is the show description (they don’t archive the show descriptions for some inane reason):

The North West Passage is a sea-route with almost mythical status, twisting through the ice of the Arctic north of Canada. Hundreds of explorers in past centuries searched for this route linking the Atlantic and the Pacific. But they perished in the ice and cold. This summer, the North West Passage was free of ice for the first time. This warming brings great opportunities but also dangers. The BBC’s environment correspondent, David Shukman, joins a Canadian coastguard ship to travel the North West Passage and report on the remarkable changes of recent years.

Here Here is a link to the audio file. The thing that caught my attention here was the level of detail paid to the geopolitical aspects of melt in the Arctic. Just how much usable hydrocarbon is down there?

I’m really looking forward to hearing the latest on ice melt at the AGU meeting.

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Welcome to the Polaris Project website and blog

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

‘Global warming’ is all over the news these days, mainly because of changes that are happening far away or because of events we fear may happen some time in the future. But in the Arctic, big changes are happening now. The Polaris Project will train undergraduates at five US universities and one Russian university to document and understand these changes.

There are a few reasons you might be here. The most likely is that you are a student at one of the Project’s institutions and you are interested in the field course in the Siberian Arctic. If so, great! Check out this post as well as looking around the rest of the site.

If you stumbled on the website and are interested in information about changes in the Arctic, you might try the International Polar Year website or some other arctic blogs we like here and here. The Polaris Project is just getting rolling and we are looking forward to years of productive science and education.

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Northward Bound!

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

The Polaris Project will give undergraduate students the opportunity to witness the changing Arctic first-hand as they participate in a field course and research experience in northeastern Siberia (8 time zones east of Moscow!). After completing an on-campus course associated with the Polaris Project, a select group of undergraduate students will travel with project scientists to the Siberian Arctic. Once leaving the US in late June 2008, we’ll first spend a few days in Moscow, then travel to Yakutsk (capital of the Sakha Republic), and finally to the Northeast Science Station at Cherskiy (north of the Arctic Circle on the Kolyma River).

To get a feel for the Northeast Science Station and team member Sergei Zimov look here.

Students on the field course will be introduced to a variety of arctic environments including boreal forest, tundra, lakes, rivers, estuaries, and the coastal ocean and conduct their own mini research projects and help project scientists plan extended field courses that will take place in 2009 and 2010. In fact, 1-2 of the student participants from 2008 will have the opportunity to return as course assistants in 2009.

The interdisciplinary approach emphasized throughout the Polaris Project mirrors the way that complex environmental science is actually done. We’ll stress the links between the different environments and explore how climate change is impacting them. Students will work closely with leading scientists and share in the excitement of scientific discover. The Polaris Project will be superb preparation for students wishing to pursue graduate studies in environmental sciences, but we seek a diverse student body which might also include non-science majors.

We expect that the Polaris Project will be an exceptional learning experience and tremendous adventure for all participants. You’ll see an extremely remote part of the world, get a first-hand view of “global warming”, conduct your own research project, and be part of a team of enthusiastic undergraduate students and scientists working together to understand the changing Arctic. If climate change, the Arctic, adventure, and teamwork appeal to you, please apply to participate in the Polaris Project 2008 field course in Siberia! Don’t forget, online applications are due February 1, 2008.

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The Polaris Project Web Site is Live

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

Well, somehow I didn’t hide underneath the desk fast enough when Max asked how we were going to get a Polaris Project web site up. I thought he was just asking me for things I thought should be on the site. Like a blog, and photo sharing, and a wiki, and a place for students to apply to the field course that uses a database to store the applications and such. Oh, and I thought our site should consume RSS feeds from the IPY blogs.

I told Max that he should get somebody to do this. He displayed the kind of managerial brilliance that I aspire to by somehow convincing me that not only could I make the website, but that it would be easy. Apparently, I’m a sucker because I somehow agreed with him even though I’m a programming hack and have never done web design before (and it shows, I know).

I hope the blog takes off. Max will be contacting all the team members (and students as they are selected) to periodically make posts on the work we are doing and how it relates to the Polaris Project.

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