South Pole Call

December 6th, 2007 andrea

P1000651
As part of the overnight snow school (aka ‘happy camper’) we learned how to make HF radio calls from the field to McMurdo and The Pole. Many more photos if you click on the image here of Dr. Adam Soule and the HF antenna including a group of us setting up the antenna and the ice cave we slept in.
Here’s a binaural recording of our team making the call and having a bit of fun:

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Helo

December 6th, 2007 andrea

P1000589
Binaural helicopter taking off from McMurdo (headphones recommended):

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Ken Mankoff from the Center for Climate Systems Research

December 6th, 2007 andrea

Ken Mankoff
I was able to interview Ken Mankoff from the Center for Climate Systems Research at Columbia University here at McMurdo. He is developing the edGCM (Educational Global Climate Model). You can hear more about it in the interview below:


Links to edgcm projects: http://edgcm.columbia.edu
http://pace.edgcm.columbia.edu

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Marianne Okal of UNAVCO

December 2nd, 2007 andrea

Marianne Okal of UNAVCO

Yesterday I had the opportunity to meet Marianne Okal, who through her work at UNAVCO, builds gps systems to support field science work. UNAVCO maintains GPS stations in fixed locations around McMurdo that serve to calibrate roving GPS systems at field sites. Because GPS information from satellites can be subject to weather and electrical conditions, UNAVCO’s fixed base systems help to provide more accurate information by constantly comparing GPS readings at the fixed bases to their known locations, and then error correcting for all GPS systems in the area.

Marianne showed me some GPS systems she had been building for the field, and some visualizations of GPS data from a survey on a glacier shown here.

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Science at the Crary Lab

December 2nd, 2007 andrea

shell inside the snail

Yesterday Crary Lab supervisor Cara Sucher gave me and another McMurdo newbie a tour of the Crary Lab. What is unique and exciting about Crary is that scientists of very different disciplines work side by side in one building, and sometimes even share the same lab. My studio is also located in Crary, and it is great to be in such close quarters to the scientists.

Crary is divided into 3 ‘stages’. The first stage contains several biology labs including temperature controlled labs that look like large meat lockers. In these labs, specimens from the field are analyzed, and because transportation of specimens can be so difficult, a large amount of lab work is done in these labs.

The second stage contains geology labs, and is currently filled with scientists from the Andrill project, the deepest earth core drilling and paleoclimate analysis that has ever been done.

The third stage contains tanks for living specimens: fish, snails and other animals. Pictured here is a snail that has its shell inside. It looks like a yellow plastic toy, but when you hold it you can feel it moving, pretty amazing.  Click the image for more pictures of the lab.

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