| Antarctic
Research Vessel Heads North to Map Arctic Waters
National
Science Foundation
Posted June 13, 2003
ARLINGTON, Va.--An ice-breaking Antarctic research vessel
will sail to the Arctic for the first time this summer to
conduct a comprehensive survey of the chemistry, temperature
and other characteristics of the waters off Alaska.
Other scientists who are seeking to untangle the complicated
web of relationships between the shallow ocean shelves and
deep basins of the Arctic Ocean will use the survey to guide
their research. They hope to understand to what extent climate
change is already occurring in the Arctic, what its effects
might be on the plants and animals that live there and the
people who depend upon them, and what measures might be taken
to compensate for any change.
The
research vessel Nathaniel B. Palmer usually operates in the
Southern Hemisphere for the U.S. Antarctic Program, which
is managed by the National Science Foundation (NSF). But this
summer, a team of NSF-funded Arctic researchers will use it
as a platform to map the distribution of salinity, temperature,
nutrients and other characteristics over the outer shelf to
deep basin region of the Chukchi and Beaufort seas off northern
Alaska.
NSF
is an independent federal agency that supports fundamental
research and education across all fields of science and engineering,
with an annual budget of nearly $5 billion.
The
Palmer, which otherwise would be in port during an off-season
lull, will be used in place of a Canadian icebreaker that
was unavailable to support the research cruise.
The
Palmer will conduct the marine survey as part of NSF's Western
Arctic Shelf Basin Interactions (SBI) project. SBI researchers
are trying to identify processes that govern the exchanges
of water of the shallow shelves that surround the Arctic Ocean
basin and the deep-water basin itself.
Currently,
the ocean basins act as carbon-dioxide reservoirs, or sinks,
locking up some of the gas and preventing it from escaping
into the atmosphere. Any change in the current carbon dioxide
balance could have direct effects on air temperatures and
the amount of sea ice covering the Arctic Ocean. For example
they might cause some species to flourish that currently cannot
and sufficiently change the habitat of others to make it impossible
for them to survive in their present ecological niche.
James
Swift, of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla,
Calif., the chief scientist for the summer research cruise,
said his team will map the various characteristics of the
waters in the SBI study region to provide a reference grid
for the other SBI cruises in this three-year field program.
Using
a variety of methods, including sampling with a conductivity,
temperature, depth sensor, or CTD, which is lowered over the
side of the ship, the scientists will collect water which
they will analyze for such variables as salinity and dissolved
oxygen as well as the concentrations of chlorophyll and nutrients.
"We
hope, once the cruise is over, to be able to produce a very
good map of the physical, chemical, pigment and other variables
in the SBI study region," he said. "When we're finished
we will know where exactly this property or that is highest
or lowest."
A
series of cruises are planned as part of the SBI project,
to take samples of marine life and survey marine mammal populations.
The 2003 survey cruise, however, will be unique in its mapping
function. "We will have time to both cover a wider area
and also to cover some of the SBI area more intently,"
Swift noted.
Also
sailing aboard the Palmer will be Jim Rogers, a science and
geography teacher at Polson High School on the Flathead Indian
Reservation in northwestern Montana. He will participate under
the auspices of the Teachers Experiencing the Arctic and Antarctic
program, a joint initiative of NSF's Office of Polar Programs
and its education and human resources directorate.
The
Palmer, which was undergoing routine maintenance in Lyttleton,
New Zealand, is scheduled to arrive in Alaskan waters in early
July and to complete its cruise by late August. Swift, who
has previous experience as a researcher on the Palmer off
the coast of Antarctica in winter, said the ship is well suited
for the kind of work it will be doing for the first time in
the Arctic.
The
94-meter (308-foot) Palmer is equipped with labs and other
facilities for examining the biological, oceanographic, geological
and geophysical components of global change. It accommodates
37 scientists, has a crew of 22, and is capable of 75-day
missions.
Built
by Edison Chouest Offshore Inc., of Galliano, La., the ship
was accepted for use by the Antarctic Program in 1992.
The
ship is named for Nathaniel Brown Palmer, the American credited
with first seeing Antarctica. Palmer, then 21 years old, commanded
the 14-meter (45-foot) sloop Hero, which on Nov. 16 and 17
1820 entered Orleans Strait and came very close to the Antarctic
Peninsula. Later in his life, Palmer also won wealth and fame
as a pioneer clipper shipmaster and designer.
Palmer's
trip north compliments a deployment to Antarctic waters of
the U.S, Coast Guard icebreaker Healy, which has carried out
previous SBI cruises. During the 2002-2003 Antarctic research
season, Healy, an icebreaker specifically designed to support
polar research, was sent south to help keep open a vital sea-lane
used to resupply McMurdo Station, NSF's scientific and logistical
hub in Antarctica.
Healy
will conduct research this summer in the Arctic near Greenland.
National
Science Foundation
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