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Displaying items by tag: Germany
Monday, 10 December 2007 06:05
Polarstern: Crossing the circumpolar current
Written Sunday, 9 December
It is nippy outside- later I see on the computer screen that for the first time we have temperatures below freezing. Later, during the evening meeting, Harry reports that we crossed the circumpolar current and have reached the Weddell gyre. Another 24 hours, and we are in the ice!
When I go up to the bridge about half an hour before lunch, we are moving towards two icebergs that lie like twins in the calming sea, probably broken apart only since a short while. We will travel right through the middle and reach them probably in about three quarters of an hour. Every now and then, the...
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Sunday, 09 December 2007 06:02
Polarstern: Avoiding the swells
Written Saturday, 8 December
On Saturdays I often sleep in and read the newspaper. However today is a normal working day at sea, thankfully more relaxed than the intense sampling during the previous 48 hours. There is an opportunity for consolidation — to stack samples, review data sheets and computer records, compile photos and their metdata and generally just catch up. The underway data continues and the Continuous Plankton Recorder is sampling the zooplankton as we go.
The weather overnight was stormy and the Polarstern altered course from south to south-west to avoid the worst swells. Under these condi...
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Saturday, 08 December 2007 06:00
Polarstern: The multicorer - a success story
Written Friday, 7 December
Finally: we had our first deployment. 3,000 m of water underneath. The first benthic station at 52° 2.31’ S and 0° 1.20’ W. Benthos is the seafloor, and we are investigating the life there. Finally: One sampling gear after the other was set over the side. Wind and seas were clement. Temperature just above freezing. Ideal working conditions.
We, that is Annika Henche and Gritta Veit-Köhler of the Senckenberg Institute in Wilhlemshaven and five other colleagues working with samples from the multicorer. The multicorer — MUC for short — looks like a moon lander that is sent ...
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Friday, 07 December 2007 05:23
Polarstern: Hunting for big megabenthic animals
Written Thursday, 6 December
Today is St. Nicholas Day and my birthday. Saint Nicholas has been busy during the night, and yesterday he actually came all the way from Holland and brought us beautiful stationary with expedition stamps, and on top of all that he had even written a poem!
Last night I could not wait for the morning after all, so I curiously looked at all the little presents my loved ones had smuggled into my sea chest (it was shortly after Midnight and therefore already the 6th :-). I got some really nice surprises and enjoyed them very much, and when I got on deck this morning to see what my fe...
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Thursday, 06 December 2007 05:19
Polarstern: How to waste a night away
Written Wednesday, 5 December
The time has finally come, we reached the first station. Yippiiieeeh... after a week of setting up the laboratories, trying to find one’s way on and below deck, fighting and winning against sea sickness and, above all, suspenseful waiting, we were quite surprised when we went on the work deck after breakfast. Like gnomes the crew has put our gear from the C deck onto the work deck with the help of cranes in the very early hours of the day.
...
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Wednesday, 05 December 2007 05:18
Polarstern: Waiting out the storm
Written Tuesday, 4 December
The sixth day on Polarstern followed a stormy night with 9 to 10 Beaufort winds. Even though we are still underway to our first station, scientific work is carried out nonetheless.
Last Saturday we started with our continuous chlorophyll measurements to get an overview of phytoplankton productivity in different water masses. Every four hours, be it day or night, water samples are taken through the well hole of the ship and then filtered. The well hole is, as the name suggests, a hole in the ship which can be used to take samples of surface water. There is no danger of the ship sin...
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Tuesday, 04 December 2007 05:16
Polarstern: Deep-sea camera for beginners
Written Monday, 3 December
What a perfect day! I am on board of Polarstern for the first time, heading for the Antarctic.That is magnificent and exciting — a real adventure. We have high sea state, it is cloudy and windy. But that does not matter. I have got a nice little lab in the belly of the ship that is just right for what I am doing.
During this cruise I am responsible for the deep-sea camera. With this camera we will take video footage of the ocean floor in depths to 5000 meters. The images will give us a first impression of the sediment characteristics and the abundance of animals in the deep sea....
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Monday, 03 December 2007 05:14
Polarstern: Holiday atmosphere
Written Sunday, 2 December
Today is Sunday, and it is the first Sunday in Advent 2007, recognizable by the kitchen serving us duck and red cabbage together with dumplings. Additionally, most of the scientists started decorating their working places with Christmas stuff, creating a holiday atmosphere even far away from home and the normal routine. There is a fairy light making for a Christmas atmosphere in the sorting lab and an Advent calendar (you get to open a door to look at little pictures hidden behind each day until Christmas Eve) around the next corner.
While the lonely “Continuous Plankton Recorder...
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Saturday, 01 December 2007 05:10
Polarstern: On epibenthic sledges
Written Friday, 30 November
The epibenthic sledge (EBS) called “Meta“ is a prototype designed by Nils Brenke. It consists of two frames of steel with a total weight of 484 kg , and it is 3.45 m long, 1.13 m high and 1.2 m wide. It is designed to sample benthic macro-fauna from shallow waters to depths of more than 6000m. Meta was used many times in the Southern Ocean since the expedition ANDEEP I in 2002 and therefore shows many scars. None of the steel parts are straight any more.
Unfortunately the container including Meta had been put on the front deck. While all boxes and smaller instruments could be unloaded and carried to the right places relatively fast (see yesterday’s entry), this was not an option for the sledge. It took half a day for three peo...
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Friday, 30 November 2007 05:08
Polarstern: On the way to Antarctica
Written Thursday, 29 November
After the first night at sea, which ended with a still strangely bright morning, we start a very busy day. We scientists get an introduction into the daily operations of the ship into which we will have to integrate ourselves in the next 70 days, and after that a siren calls us for a first safety drill. Today this means only that we move to the assembly point on the heli deck, dressed warmly, wearing a hat and proper shoes and the life vest.
The antarctic already in my heart, I walk through the door to the outside — and I am very surprised to find the air still very warm! We are still at 37° South, and a long way away from our study area. In the afternoon we busy ourselves getting the boxes, which we had packed such a long tim...
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