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Displaying items by tag: Australia
Saturday, 30 December 2006 03:03
ICEE: Integrated Communication, Education and Evaluation
Integrated Communication, Education and Evaluation: A Clearinghouse and Coordinating Effort for IPY EOC
Working with education and communication experts around the world, we will help coordinate and add value to IPY education, outreach and communications (EOC) activities, linking to formal and informal science education networks and standards, leveraging existing talent and tools in order to help maximize the potential for IPY to serve as a catalyst for science education and awareness.
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Saturday, 30 December 2006 02:30
PANDA: Program of Antarctic Nova Disciplines Aspects
Inter-discipline Survey along Prydz Bay, Amery Ice Shelf and Dome A
The 2000km interconnected Prydz Bay-Amery Ice Shelf-Lambert Basin-Dome A (PANDA) section in Antarctica plays an important role in Antarctic mass balance, sea level and climate change. About thirty observation systems for glaciology, oceanography, geology/geophysics, sun-earth physics, atmospheric science and astronomy will be installed and implemented along the section by the international cooperative expeditions leading by China during IPY2007-2009 and beyond.
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Saturday, 30 December 2006 02:38
AstroPoles: Astronomy from the Polar Plateaus
Because of their cold, dry and stable air, the polar regions are the finest locations on the planet for making frontline astronomical observations. AstroPoles is a 15-nation project to assess the astronomical conditions at four polar sites – Dome A and Dome C in Antarctica, and summit Station and Ellesmere Island in the Arctic. By measuring sky brightness, optical seeing, water vapour content and the meteorological conditions at these sites, AstroPoles will provide baseline data to assess what astronomical facilities could be built in the polar regions, and the kind of science they could tackle.
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Saturday, 30 December 2006 02:32
THORPEX-IPY: Improved numerical weather forecasting and climate simulations
Some of the most dramatic weather events – including spring thaws, sea ice movements and the strong winds and high seas associated with severe winter cyclones – occur in the polar regions, and being able to forecast these events more accurately is crucial for mitigating their impact on local communities, fisheries, wildlife, energy production and transport. Using satellite data, this 15-nation project will help design the next generation of observing networks that are needed to improve our ability to forecast “high impact” weather events in polar regions.
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Saturday, 30 December 2006 02:31
The Greenland Ice Sheet: Stability, History and Evolution
The Greenland Ice Sheet is an outstanding archive of information about what the Earth’s climate was like in the past, and the water locked in its ice will have a major impact on sea level rise due to climate change. Because of this, understanding how Greenland will react to global warming is crucially important. By gathering seismic data, ice cores and using radar, laser ranging and echo sounders, this project will shed new light on the Greenland Ice Sheet and improve scientists’ ability to model how it will react to climate change.
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Saturday, 30 December 2006 01:47
ICECAP: Investigating the Cryospheric Evolution of the Central Antarctic Plate
International Team Collects New Information about Ice Sheet Growth and Collapse With a Long-range Aircraft in East Antarctica
Our international team will conduct an airborne survey over the central East Antarctic Ice Sheet (EAIS), which has been nearly inaccessible until now. We will use a long-range aircraft to fly from a US base deep into the interior of the EAIS over a two-year period. The team will use radar and other airborne instruments to image the EAIS’ internal features and the bedrock below the ice. The observations will allow our team to study ice sheet formation and decay, as well as subglacial lakes, subglacial geology, and changes in ice accumulation through time.
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Saturday, 30 December 2006 01:22
BIAC: Bipolar Atlantic Thermohaline Circulation
Dense water formation in Polar areas; Impact on global ocean circulation and climate
This international team of oceanographers will embark on expeditions to the Polar Oceans with ice going vessels to measure ocean temperature, salinity and currents, ice formation and distribution. They will employ remote sensing as well as bottom anchored instrument moorings to feed global numerical models. The project will try to estimate the impact of dense water formation in the polar regions on the global ocean circulation and climate.
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Friday, 29 December 2006 08:22
6CI: The Sixth Continent Initiative
The Sixth Continent Initiative aims to introduce scientists from countries who have no experience in Antarctica to the research which is carried out there, during the IPY 2007, as a reaffirmation of the provision of the Antarctic Treaty that dedicates the continent to peace and science for all mankind.
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Friday, 29 December 2006 08:08
BIRD HEALTH: Health of arctic and antarctic bird populations
"What does it mean for an bird to be sick? How does this affect not only survival but also reproduction. In short, the aim of the project is:
The role of parasites and pathogens in determining the size and distribution of arctic and antarctic bird populations.
1. Study geographic variation in infections, parasite loads, viral prevalence, immune system functioning
2. Study the effects of infections, parasites, viruses and immune response on fitness parameters and energetics of individually marked birds
3. Link the observed trends to pathogen-host (or parasite-host) interaction, dynamics of the pool of pathogens and pollution levels.
4. Modelling future scenario’s of geographic variation and relating the findings to climate change,
nature management and human health."
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Friday, 29 December 2006 05:52
PPS Arctic
PPS Arctic: Present day processes, Past changes, and Spatiotemporal variability of biotic, abiotic and socio-environmental conditions and resource components along and across the Arctic delimitation zone.
PPS Arctic investigates the causes and consequences of changes in the circumarctic treeline zone, using fieldwork and remote sensing to study and model temporal and spatial aspects of ecological, social and cultural factors. Changes in the zone affect Arctic ecosystem processes, resource availability and the entire Arctic climate through changes in tree and shrub cover and in albedo, with global consequences.
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