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Displaying items by tag:Antarctic
Thursday, 28 May 2009 13:53
Dr Eric Wolff and the quest for million year old ice
Dr Eric Wolff is the 2009 recipient of the prestigious Louis Agassiz Medal awarded by the European Geosciences Union (EGU). SciencePoles recently interviewed Dr Wolff on the subject of climate cycles and the quest for million year old ice.
A veteran of 6 Antarctic seasons and 2 Greenland seasons, Dr Wolff has been working for the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) for over twenty years, and played a central role in the extremely important European Project for Ice Coring in Antarctica (EPICA). A leading expert in the study of the chemical composition of snow cover and ice cores and their use...
Tuesday, 26 May 2009 17:10
THE ANTARCTICA CHALLENGE: Reaches Out Globally
Documentary filmmaker Mark Terry, president of Polar Cap Productions, Inc., took a
team to Antarctica last December and January to document the recent findings made by
the world’s scientific community during International Polar Year.
The documentary will focus on new discoveries made related to the ozone hole, the
diminishing populations of penguins and other marine life, the greening of the world’s
largest desert, warming temperatures, glacial melting and increased world sea level.
Featuring interviews from polar scientists from Canada, the US, the UK, Ukraine and
Russia, a global cross-section of research on climate change will be presented.
One of these featured interviews will be with Dr. David Ainley, renowned...
by
Karen Edwards
Category:
IPY Blogs
Tuesday, 12 May 2009 17:06
NSF & NAS Celebrate IPY 2007-2008
The National Academy of Sciences together with the National Science Foundation held a celebration on 6 April 2009 to recognize the achievements of the International Polar Year 2007-2008 (IPY). The meeting included highlights of IPY projects, including such topics as climate change, sea ice stability, Antarctic ecosystems, and people in the Arctic. Presentation videos detailing various aspects of IPY research are available on the NSF website.
Posted presentations include:
- "Welcoming and Opening Remarks," by James White, Ralph J. Cicerone, and Arden L. Bement, Jr.;
- "How the Past Informs the Future," by Richard Alley, Pennsylvania State University;...
by
Karen Edwards
Category:
IPY Blogs
Wednesday, 22 April 2009 04:10
FSU IPY Cruise: Meet Professor of Oceanography Bill Landing
FSU IPY Cruise: Meet Professor of Oceanography Bill Landing
CLIVARI6S, Southern Ocean, approaching Antarctica: FSU’s Bill Landing works on deck in the driving sleet of austral summer. Photo by Brett Longworth
Hi, again, from your outreach coordinator and the whole FSU Oceanography team. Though we’ve been “off the radar” for some time now, having traded our sea legs for terra firma, our IPY work is far from over. We’ve introduced part of our team and shared some experiences from our ship time collecting samples on the outbound leg of our CLIVARI6S transect, Longitude 30° E, from S. Africa to Anta...
The 8th Polar Day (topic: Polar Oceans) elicited so much interest that it turned into a full week of events that took place across the globe from some likely places such as Edinburgh, Winnipeg and Nuuk to some not so likely places like Brazil & Malaysia. Take a peek at some of the exciting highlights from classrooms, radio stations, field schools and public outreach sessions around the world. Edinburgh, UK: March 14th - 15th The Dynamic Earth science center hosted a hands-on public session with researchers from the Scottish Association for Marine Science who displayed Arctic research footage from recent expeditions. The most popular part of the event was when people got a chance to don the equipment worn by polar scientists. We may have just h...
by
Karen Edwards
Category:
IPY Blogs
Monday, 09 March 2009 22:21
Princess Elisabeth Antarctica: A Marvel of Sustainable Development
Picture: International Polar Foundation / R. Robert
On February 15th, 2009, the Brussels-based International Polar Foundation (IPF) officially inaugurated the new Princess Elisabeth Antarctica Station, the very first Antarctic research station ever designed and built to run entirely on renewable solar and wind energies. The new "zero emission" Belgian research station is the only research platform completed during the fourth International Pola...
by
International Polar Foundation
Category:
IPY Blogs
Thursday, 26 February 2009 18:09
A message from the ITASC IPY 0809 expedition
A message from the ITASC IPY 0809 expedition
February 25 — We are in the middle of the Southern Ocean at 51 degrees south, tracking the Greenwich Meridian still six days out of Cape Town, and unfortunately we cannot join you in Geneva tonight.
We are with you in spirit though and celebrating the IPY tonight with a toast onboard the South African Antarctic research vessel SA Agulhas. On behalf of ITASC expedition leader Ntsikelelo Ntshingila, crew members Erika Blumenfeld, Lotter Kock and myself, and all the scientists and engineers who joined us at the ICEPAC IPY Base during its insta...
With all our scientific equipment staged with ANZ in Christchurch, ready to fly down to the Ice, all that remains for me and Alex is to pack a few good books, set our lives in order for the next nine and half months and bid farewell to those around us - the latter possibly being the hardest part of all. Last night, to mark our imminent departure, we met with friends and colleagues from the University of Otago at the Carey’s Bay Hotel, just outside Port Chalmers – the last port of call for many early Antarctic expedition including those of Scott and Shackleton. The hotel is reputedly the location Captain Robert Falcon Scott’s last meal before setting sail from New Zealand on his fateful journey to Antarctica in November, 1910. Although were unable to confirm this story, it did make fo...
by
McMurdo Sound Winter Sea Ice
Category:
IPY Blogs
Tuesday, 27 January 2009 01:01
After Fifty Years The Gamburtsev Mountains Emerge
Photo Credit - AGAP team
There were many times in the last two months where it seemed that the Antarctic Continent would win, keeping hidden the extensive landscape of subglacial lakes and mountains beneath the several kilometers of ice on Dome A. All the advance planning and negotiating with program leaders and logistics groups for enough days in the field to run the airborne geophysics were of little importance once we arrived on Antarctica. At this point we were negotiating with the continent herself, and we learned she can drive a hard bargain!
The group at AGAP S camp had anticipated...
Friday, 16 January 2009 20:25
Exploring Subglacial Lake Ellsworth
Neil Ross writes:
Rather belated greetings from Subglacial Lake Ellsworth (SLE). I had hoped to post something a bit sooner in the season (we have already been here three weeks) but there has been far too much work to do and good weather to do it in. Sorry! Here is the first installment from late last month, more to come...
26-31 December:
Last season at SLE we undertook a series of geophysical measurements (seismics and radar) to map the size and depth of the lake, which is located beneath three kilometers of West Antarctic Ice Sheet. This year, the primary goals were the resurvey of the location of 60 metal poles left in the ice surface last season, using a GPS to measure their elevation, how far they had travelled, and in whic...
by
Exploring Subglacial Lake Ellsworth
Category:
IPY Blogs
Calendar of Events
- 22.06.2010 - 25.06.2010 Western Pacific Geophysic...
- 21.06.2010 - 24.06.2010 24th International Forum ...
- 21.06.2010 - 23.06.2010 Antarctic Visions: Cultur...
- 21.06.2010 - 09.07.2010 Interdisciplinary Polar F...
- 20.06.2010 - 26.06.2010 ISOPE 2010, International...
News
- Wed, 03 Mar 2010IPY Report: March 2010
- Tue, 02 Feb 2010IPY Report: February 2010
- Thu, 21 Jan 2010IPY Oslo Science Conference -...
- Fri, 08 Jan 2010IPY Report: January 2010
Friends of IPY
- A Morning at Palmer
- Fri, 12 Mar 2010Lights Out March 27th for...
- Fri, 12 Mar 2010Jenna Gall (Arctic ‘09, Antarctica...
- Fri, 12 Mar 2010Check out our Polar sessions...
- Fri, 12 Mar 2010Snowball Earth or Slushball Earth?
