
news
release August
1, 2005
Contacts: Heather Emmons, DRI PIO,
heather.emmons@dri.edu, Reno
(775) 673-7313 (w), (702) 743-3435 (c)
Dr. Glenn Berger, Research Professor,
glenn.berger@HEALY.polarscience.net,
(775) 673-7348
All DRI News Releases and higher resolution map available at:
http://news.dri.edu/
DRI scientist Dr. Glenn Berger embarks on second leg
of historic Arctic Ocean voyage to map ocean bottom
Results
may help shed light on global climate change issues
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 |
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| Dr. Glenn Berger participates in the first leg (June 2005)
of the
Arctic Ocean voyage |
The USCG icebreaker Healy cuts through young
Arctic Ocean ice during the June cruise |
The USCG icebreaker Healy ramming thick Ocean ice in June, 2005 |
RENO,
Nev. – In
the Inupiat Eskimo Village in Barrow, Alaska - the northern-most habitation
on American territory- the villagers and visiting biologists have noticed
some changes: puffins, which are lower-latitude birds have started inhabiting
this colder region. Last summer, a shark was sighted in the waters southwest
of Barrow for the first time. And the Inupiat Eskimos aren't the only
ones who have seen changes. In northern Canada, people are witnessing
thunderstorms--a weather event they have never experienced within their lifetimes--as
well as robins and pacific salmon; the Yukon area of northern Canada isn't
experiencing winters as cold as normal; and permafrost is melting rapidly
in several parts of Alaska and in nothern Canada.
Coincidence? Not to Dr. Glenn Berger, a DRI research professor who
will be getting to the bottom of this--literally--by pulling mud cores from
the depths of the Arctic Ocean beginning Aug. 5-Sept. 30, from over the side
of the USCG Healy icebreaker.
The multi-national expedition, sponsored by the National Science Foundation,
is the second leg of two complimentary expeditions. During the first
leg, which was June 13-26, the scientists explored the western Arctic Ocean
(northwest of Alaska) using only the USCG Healy. Leg 2 involves both
the Healy and the Swedish icebreaker and research vessel Oden that will cross
the North Pole, ending in Norway. The voyage represents only the second-ever
crossing of the central Arctic Ocean by two research surface ships (the last
was in 1994) and is the largest geologic expedition to the central Arctic
Ocean in the last 20 years. The science party hopes to learn more about
how the Arctic Ocean basin formed, the nature and physical characteristics
of the ocean and the Arctic's sensitivity to record past climate changes
and to predict climate change.
"The Arctic Ocean is the last major ocean to be explored scientifically. Despite
advances in oceanography in the past century, scientists know more about the
nature and origins of the surface of the moon than they do about the make up
of the Arctic Ocean seafloor," Berger said. "Moreover, the effects of climate
change tend to appear in the Arctic before showing up in more temperate regions
and thus the Arctic Ocean is both a “canary in the mine” and a generator
of global change, because much of the world’s ocean-circulation cold bottom
waters are produced there."
Scientists will conduct high-resolution mapping of the ocean bottom
and its bedrock structure using geophysical tools, study the ice and the
water column to learn about present conditions and take sediment cores (up
to 25 m long) that record the Arctic’s past climatic record, perhaps
as far back as several hundred thousand years.
Berger
will be conducting one of the paleoclimatic elements of the research, which
involves analyzing mud cores that reveal changes in climate over the last
few thousand years. The analysis of the cores will take place at
DRI's E.L. Cord Luminescence-Geochronology Laboratory, a state-of-the-art
dating facility that he helped found with support from DRI and the E.L. Cord
Foundation of Nevada.
"Recognizing the patterns of the past provides a necessary baseline for predicting
the future," Berger explains. "The
changes we are seeing today are rapid changes. It's
possible that by mid-century we won't need icebreakers to go to China from Europe
in the summer."
Students and teachers are encouraged to track the icebreaker's journey, read
the cruise diary and look at the photo gallery at: www.odu.edu/sci/oceanography/hotrax/index1.htm
Students can ask a scientist a question at: www.arcus.org/trec/vbc/index.php?showforum=3
ABOUT DRI: A nonprofit, statewide division of the Nevada System
of Higher Education, DRI pursues a full-time program of basic and applied
environmental research on a local, national, and international scale. Nearly
500 full- and part-time scientists, technicians, and support staff conduct
more than 300 research projects at DRI annually. DRI generates $45
million in total revenue consisting predominately of competitively won research
contracts and grants. The State of
Nevada
provides
critical funding in support of DRI's administration, operations and maintenance,
through the Nevada System of Higher Education's budget. While DRI’s
portion of the NSHE budget is less than 1 percent, the institute leverages
these funds to enhance its competitiveness.