Arctic Update Header
November 12, 2019
 
As the Arctic Climate Changes, So Does Outdoor Gardening, November 12, 2019 (Radio Show) . Alaska Public Media hosts this call in show. As winter approaches, farmers and gardeners make plans for spring crops. Climate change effects on the growing season in Alaska means new opportunities and challenges for the future. Will residents, even in the arctic, be able to grow enough food for their winter use? What are the prospects for food security and micro economies in remote regions of our state?
Media

Robert M Anderson. Sadly, the ocean mapping community lost a passionate and knowledgeable colleague on Monday, November 4, 2019 as Robert Anderson (better known as Bob) died of a heart attack while attending the annual meeting of the General Bathymetric Chart of the Oceans (GEBCO) in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, USA. Bob had participated as an active member in GEBCO for almost 30 years, championing the global acquisition of seafloor mapping data, serving as mentor for the younger generation, and working on numerous outreach projects with the goal of showing the need for mapping the world oceans for the benefit of mankind.

Bob's contributions to ocean mapping go far beyond his association with GEBCO. He was an adept acoustician, who was quick to see the potential for new instrumentation to solve science and US Navy operational problems. With a background in mathematics, he began his professional career at the US Navy Electronics Laboratory (NEL) in the early 1960s. At NEL, he worked with Dr Waldo Lyon on the scientific exploration of the Arctic Ocean Basin from submarines under the pack ice. Waldo came to Bob and his two close colleagues Rod McLennan and Bob Vachon and said they needed a new active sonar for secure piloting of submarines under ice. Together with his colleagues, he developed what became known as APEX (Arctic Pulse Experimental) sonar, which revolutionized under-ice submarine operations. The APEX sonar was patented and the group of three colleagues received the Vice Admiral Harold G. Bowen Award in recognition of their invention. In 1980, Bob was transferred to the US Navy's Arctic Submarine Laboratory (ASL) that was founded by Waldo years earlier. He became the lab's Technical Director in 1993, a position he retained until his retirement 2000. After retirement, Bob relocated to the Pacific Northwest but kept deeply immersed in the seafloor mapping community. He was present and provided input at many GEBCO functions as well as IHO/IOC symposia.

Bob was instrumental in the release of bathymetric data from US nuclear submarines that had transited under the Arctic pack ice. He supported George Newton, Chairman of the US Arctic Research Commission, in getting classified data collected from 1957-1982 submarine under-ice cruises declassified and released in 1999. These data were provided to the then newly-formed International Bathymetric Chart of the Arctic Ocean (IBCAO) project. It was truly a new turning point for Arctic Ocean mapping and Arctic Ocean science leading to the publication by IBCAO of the first gridded compilation in 2000 of the Arctic, largely based on the submarine data in the deep central basin. Bob shepherded additional releases of submarine data that were provided to subsequent versions of IBCAO.

Through his position at ASL, Bob helped make unclassified science cruises on US Navy fast-attack submarines both possible and productive. The program for Scientific Ice Expeditions (SCICEX), which supported US academic scientists to sail aboard US nuclear submarines in the Arctic, collected unique geophysical and oceanographic data sets during a period when there was very limited access to icebreakers. He was also instrumental in developing the Seafloor Characterization and Mapping Pods that put the first swath mapping and chirp sub-bottom profiler on a US nuclear submarine. These data, collected over the major bathymetric features in the Arctic Ocean (e.g. Gakkel Ridge and Lomonosov Ridge), supported the first dredging of the Gakkel Ridge, which documented the unusual characteristics of this ultra-slow spreading ridge and help enable the first scientific ocean drilling in the Arctic Ocean.

The release of Arctic submarine bathymetric data from operational cruises and from SCICEX was truly a game-changer! Never before had so much mapping data been available from that poorly mapped region. All of a sudden, details that had never before been seen, appeared on published maps; among them groundings of ice shelves from former glaciations in the central Arctic Ocean at depths of one km. Bob was also intimately involved in efforts to develop echo-sounder buoys for use on drifting pack-ice.

Bob's passion for passing his understanding of the ocean on to future generations was reflected in his ongoing membership in the sub-committee which annually reviewed the Nippon Foundation /GEBCO training program held at the Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping, University of New Hampshire. He followed this up by making his knowledge and wisdom accessible to alumni from the training program long after their year in New Hampshire. His experience made him one of the first advisors for the GEBCO-Nippon Foundation Alumni team during the Shell Ocean Discovery XPrize challenge and the team's success in winning the prize was certainly, in part, due to the significant role played by Bob.

Bob had a passion for showing others the beauty of maps. He came up with the idea of putting the newly created Arctic IBCAO map on an umbrella, and impatiently waited as the first samples were produced. After the first manufacturing run was exhausted, Bob continued to work with the editors of the IBCAO map to revise several flaws in the map presentation on the original umbrella and produced a second version, which was also received with overwhelming praise. Bob then produced a South Polar umbrella from existing maps, which also was quickly distributed and became a collectors' item. Then came large globes (62 cm) depicting global depths at a resolution never seen before. There were problems with getting the colors and labels right with the producers in China, but Bob never gave up. Instead he befriended the manufacturer in China and went there to ensure they did it right - which of course, under his supervision, they did. His latest quest was for smaller, more affordable globes that showed our planet's relief in 3-D and that could be widely distributed to classrooms around the world.  

Unfortunately, that task is unfinished but the GEBCO community has vowed to see it to completion.   While Bob's passing has saddened us all, we are consoled by the fact that his last days were spent with the community he so loved, pursuing his vision of bringing the wonders of mapping the ocean to all.  The family has requested that memorial contributions can be made to the University of New Hampshire Foundation for the  Bob Anderson GEBCO Scholarship Fund.  Please send checks to:  The UNH Foundation, 9 Edgewood Road, Durham, NH 03824. Specify for "Bob Anderson GEBCO Scholarship Fund."
 
Or, you can make a gift online: unh.edu/give/ Hit the orange "give" button and then click "other funds" and note that your gift is for the Bob Anderson GEBCO Scholarship. 

Written by: Norm Cherkis, Bernie Coakley, Robin Falkner, John Hall , Martin Jakobsson, Larry Mayer, Rod McLennan, David Monahan, and Rochelle Wigley
 
How Did a Virus Form the Atlantic Infect Mammals in the Pacific? Sea otters and seals in the Pacific Ocean, off the coast of Alaska, are infected with a virus that once was seen only in animals in the Atlantic. A new study suggests that melting ice in the Arctic may be to blame - and that climate change may help spread the disease to new areas and new animals. New York Times
 
Frozen Researchers Will Greatly Improve Arctic Weather Prediction. With a deep breath, Sandro Dahlke releases a white weather balloon nearly as tall as himself from our ship's deck and toward the Arctic sky. The helium-filled orb shoots upward while the radiosonde-an instrument package attached to the balloon's tail that will monitor the weather-whips wildly in the wind. We are far north in the Arctic Ocean, onboard the German icebreaker Polarstern, and the wind immediately sweeps the balloon toward the starboard side as it rises-a worrying prospect for Dahlke. Typically, there would be few obstacles to encounter on the icy ocean. But today we are tethered to a Russian icebreaker, the Akademik Fedorov, which looms over our smaller one, and he is concerned the balloon might hit the neighboring ship. Scientific American  
 
Studying the Ripple Effects of Shrinking Arctic Sea Ice. Arctic sea ice is one of the most dramatic indicators of the changing climate. Ice cover on the Arctic Ocean is in some months about half what it was decades ago, and its thickness has shrunk, by some estimates 40%. Changes in the ice may also mean a host of other changes, in the Arctic system and around the globe. To better understand this, scientists have frozen an icebreaker alongside an Arctic ice floe that they will observe for a whole year. NPR
 
Mark Begich, Frustrated by Rural Alaska's Exorbitant Prices, is Opening a Grocery Store in Utquiagvik. When Mark Begich was a U.S. senator, he took visiting dignitaries on trips to rural Alaska. Every time, he said, he'd drag them into the village store, to show just how much residents had to pay for laundry detergent or a gallon of milk. "Universally, among all of them: shock. They would look at a head of lettuce that might be seven, eight, nine dollars and they're looking at you, like, 'What?'" Begich said. "They're trying to understand: How does that happen?" Alaska Public Radio
 
Arctic Could Face 'Abrupt' Climate Threats Due to Permafrost Thaw, Says Study. New research says major climate threats to Arctic communities, ecosystems and infrastructure could come much sooner than expected as vast areas of permafrost continue to thaw. The study, published in Nature Climate Change, says permafrost thaw in the region will likely drive "abrupt" climate change that will happen with "little or no warning." Most alarming, the authors found the severity of wildfires in the Northwest Territories and Yukon could double from one year to the next and stay at that higher rate.  CBC News
Future Events
  
AAS19 Arctic Symposium, November 13-15, 2019 (Fairbanks, AK USA). The Arctic Domain Awareness Center, a Department of Homeland Security Center of Excellence, will host this event along with the University of Alaska and the US Coast Guard. The principal outcome sought in AAS19 is to improve understanding of the challenges in the complicated risk environment that describes the new circumpolar north. Symposium planners seek AAS19 to create thoughtful discussions in order to gain needed solutions to address and potentially reduce the associated defense and security risks.

Greenland Science Week, December 1-5, 2019 (Nuuk, Greenland).  Greenland Science Week builds bridges between science and the Greenlandic society, business community and government, and creates a networking and cooperation platform for the Greenlandic and international science community around research in the Arctic.

ASM2019 Annual Scientific Meeting, December 2-5, 2019 (Halifax, NS Canada). Canada's North is experiencing unprecedented change in its sea and terrestrial ice, permafrost and ecosystems under the triple pressures of climate change, industrialization and modernization. The impacts of these pressures can be seen on food and energy security, shipping, sovereignty, northern community health and well-being, and sustainable development and resource exploitation. All these issues have brought the North to the forefront of national and international agendas. With a focus on networking events, this gathering of  leading Arctic researchers, graduate students, Northern community representatives, government and industry partners and stakeholders from all field s will provide all with  valuable connections where innovative ideas and initiatives  can  develop  in  support of health  and sound  governance in the Arctic.

Greenland Science Week, December 2-5, 2019 (Nuuk, Greenland). The Arctic research conference, Polar Research Day, will be held in Nuuk on December 4, 2019. Alongside the one-day conference, several additional science events are planned and organized, so that the conference, a public outreach day, themed workshops, seminars and networking activities will be part of Greenland Science Week. The event will include opportunities to meet and network with a broad range of researchers, business community, government employees and society in an Arctic context, and the organizers anticipate participants from all disciplines in discussions of Arctic science in relation to Greenland. Greenland Science Week is organized by Ilisimatusarfik, AAU Arctic, Sermersooq Municipality and Greenland Perspective.

Greenland Conference 2019, December 4, 2019 (Copenhagen, Denmark). Connectivity in the Arctic is the key for further business development and this year's topic at the Greenland Conference 2019 in Copenhagen.Companies on land, in the air and at sea will present their role in connecting Greenland locally and to the rest of the world. Greenland Venture present their work, and a Greenlandic tech start-up present their product.
 
1st Southern Hemisphere Conference on Permafrost: Permafrost at Altitude and Latitude, December 4-14, 2019 (Queenstown, New Zealand). This conference will operate in a new format, with three-day field excursions offered before and after the conference session days. This will allow participants to make a roundtrip from Christchurch to Queenstown, with visits to glaciers and glacial lakes, the South West New Zealand World Heritage Area and Aoraki/Mount Cook National Park, cultural points of interest, and scenic spots to discuss glacial and periglacial landscape development. 

IX International Forum "Arctic: Today and the Future," December 5-7, 2019 (St. Petersburg, Russia) The forum will consider Arctic development issues. The forum is supported by the State Commission for the Development of the Arctic, the Federation Council, the State Duma, the Public Chamber of Russia, and various federal ministries and departments government bodies of the constituent entities of the Russian Federation.

9th Annual Meeting of the Permafrost Carbon Network, December 8, 2019 (San Francisco, CA USA). The 9th annual meeting of the Permafrost Carbon Network will take place prior to the Fall 2019 American Geophysical Union meeting. Bringing together the international community of permafrost researchers, the program for the day will feature a series of presentations and speed talks to introduce break-out topics. Meeting participants will then have the opportunity to split into smaller break-out groups to discuss the Permafrost Carbon Network's ongoing and new synthesis products. The meeting is open to all members of the scientific community with an interest in permafrost research synthesis.
 
American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting. December 9-13, 2019 (San Francisco, CA). As per usual, there will be a lot of Arctic research presented at this huge gathering.

Arctic Frontiers, January 26-30, 2020 (Tromso, Norway).   Arctic Frontiers is a global scientific conference on economic, societal, and environmental sustainable growth. This year's theme will be "The Power of Knowledge," with a pan-arctic emphasis, and builds new partnerships across nations, generations and ethnic groups.  Arctic Frontiers provides a forum for dialogue and communication between science, government and industry in the Arctic. The  plenary program will have five main sessions with the following working titles: State of the Arctic, The power of knowledge, Robust and resilient Arctic communities, Powered by knowledge, Arctic oceans - distant connections, Sustainable business development. An abstract-driven science program will address Arctic Food Security, Local or Global Arctic? Multi-scaled considerations of connections and remoteness in climate-impacted, Disruptive Technologies and Knowledge-based Development in the Arctic.

ISAR-6: Arctic Research: the Decade Past and the Decade Future, March 2-6, 2020 (Tokyo, Japan). Rapid changes are taking place in the Arctic that impact regional human and natural systems, and affect the global environment. The International Symposium on Arctic Research (ISAR) will meet for the sixth time since its first symposium in 2008 to identify changes in the Arctic environment and society, and to discuss possible future sustainable development. The hosts invite all researchers with interests in the Arctic to participate in this multidisciplinary symposium and share their insights, their challenges, and to explore the possible futures of the Arctic.

International One Health, One Future 2020 International Conference, March 11-14, 2020 (Fairbanks, Alaska USA). This year's conference, presented by University of Alaska Fairbanks Center for One Health Research in partnership with the U.S. Department of State, will host internationally recognized keynote speakers across eight themes. There will be something for all stakeholders - community members, health care providers, state and federal agency employees, researchers, educators and students. One Health recognizes the interdependence of human, animal and environmental health, and that a holistic approach to the well-being of all will lead to improved health outcomes and enhanced resilience.

Arctic Science Summit Week and the 5th Arctic Observing Summit. March 27 to April 2, 2020, (Akureyri, Iceland). 
The Arctic Observing Summit (AOS) is a high-level biennial summit that provides a platform to address urgent and broadly recognized needs of Arctic observing across all components of the Arctic system. The theme of AOS 2020 is Observing for Action. AOS 2020 will be held in Akureyri, Iceland (March 31-April 2) and will focus on pressing issues related to the use, design, optimization and implementation of the observing system. To that end, submissions in the form of white papers, short statements and poster abstracts are requested that address any and all aspects of the overarching theme and sub-themes. Currently seeking submissions to the AOS. See link for additional information.

The 7th Annual Arctic Encounter, April 16-17, 2020 (Seattle, WA USA).  The 2019 Arctic Encounter Seattle drew participants and stakeholders from over 20 nations, including over 80 speakers, 27 sponsors, 17 media partners, northern fashion and photography art installations, 13 guest performers, the second annual Far North Fashion Show, live podcast recording sessions, musical and spoken word performances, and over 10 artist exhibitors. The 2020 Arctic Encounter Seattle expects to increase engagement in new sectors and engage participants through policy debates, research presentations, live performances, and more. The Arctic Encounter is the largest annual Arctic policy and business conference convening in the United States, with partnerships and convening efforts worldwide. 

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