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Displaying items by tag: France
Monday, 24 March 2008 21:11
Meet Hugues Lantuit - APECS (in French)
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Meet APECS scientists (in their native language):
Tuesday, 19 February 2008 21:51
Lucia Simion: Return to Concordia
By Lucia Simion
Far away from traffic jams, polluted cities and rat races, one thousand people are getting ready to live a fantastic adventure on the most remote continent of the world: They are the over-wintering population of Antarctica. Inhabiting some 35 different permanent stations scattered across a continent twice as large as Europe, they will be alone on the ice, where they will experience the polar night, the austral auroras, the blizzards, the solitude and the confinement. They will be more isolated than the astronauts on the International Space Station (ISS) as it is very hard to be evacuated from Antarctica during the polar night.
One of these stations is Concordia, where the overwintering began on February 1, 2008 for a crew of thirteen people fr...
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Monday, 18 February 2008 02:42
Far south in the Ross Sea
Submitted February 17, 2008:
Over the past few days we have been working our way south into the lower Ross Sea and then eastwards towards 180°, paralleling the Ross Ice Shelf. During this period Tangaroa got to its southernmost point ever at 76° 52.164’S 179° 55.856’ W.
As expected, the main controller of all our activities has been the weather. Heavy snow showers earlier in this period gave everything a white coating, but once the snow cleared and the clouds broke, we had good (but distant) views of Ross Island, with the mountains of the Asgaard and Olympic Ranges as a backdrop.
...
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IPY Blogs
Tuesday, 19 February 2008 23:53
In the Ross Sea
Submitted February 13, 2008:
Now that we are in the open waters of the Inner Ross Sea, the sampling program can start in earnest. In the typical style of all marine surveys, some of the gear gave us problems on the first deployment but once teething problems were sorted everything worked as we wanted.
As expected, the weather has already had an impact. From a relatively calm sea we suddenly expe...
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IPY Blogs
Thursday, 14 February 2008 18:21
History of French Expeditions
Drawing South is a website documenting the visual communication of artist Nicholas Hutcheson from on board the ship Aurora Australis as it visits 3 of the Australian bases on one of the annual re-supply trips.
Nicholas will be heading to the Antarctic as part of the Australian Governments Antarctic Arts fellowship progam.
Each week of the 8 week voyage, a new set of drawings will be uploaded featuring the weather, interviews with people working in the Antartic, answers to viewers questions and the daily observations of things around him.
Part of this project is working with school students who are following the journey, asking him questions and learning about Ant...
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links and resources
Sunday, 06 January 2008 08:35
Tara Soon to be released from the Ice
Press Release from RV Polarstern 04.01.2008
Antarctic biodiversity research hits Time magazine’s “Top 10” scientific discoveries for 2007
Time Magazine has recognised Antarctic biodiversity research in its Top 10 scientific discoveries for 2007. The discovery was reported in the journal Nature in May 2007. The researchers found over 700 new species of organisms, including isopod crustaceans, carnivorous sponges and giant sea spiders on the seafloor of the Weddell Sea off Antarctica, at bottom depths from 700 m to 6,000 m.
The Nature paper on biodiversity and biogeography of the Southern Ocean deep sea was published by a team of 21 biologists. Right now, four of them are at sea off Antarctica on the German icebreaker RV Polarstern, conti...
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News And Announcements
Monday, 07 January 2008 02:43
Photography Comes to the Polar Regions--Almost
Which way did the camera go first: north or south? The Antarctic edged out her northern counterpart by only a handful of years. James Clark Ross' narrative of his 1839-43 expedition does not reveal any photographic outfit in its inventory, but one of his medical men later noted just such an apparatus for posterity. Dr. Joseph D. Hooker was lecturing about the historic expedition at the Royal Institution of South Wales in 1846 when he offered these words:
I believe no instruments, however newly invented, was omitted, even down to an apparatus for daguerreotyping and talbotyping, and we left England provided with a register for every known phenomenon of nature, though certainly not qualified to cope with them all.
The responsibility for any photographic ...
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IPY Blogs
Tuesday, 16 October 2007 21:38
To the Arctic... by blimp
"Never give up your dreams". Jean-Louis Etienne — the French doctor and explorer — knows more than anyone what these words mean; for four years he has been involved with the Total Pole Airship project, which aims to fly a blimp over the Arctic ocean and the North Pole, measuring the thickness of the sea ice with an instrument designed by the Alfred-Wegener Institute.
Last Friday, October 12, Jean-Louis Etienne could finally smile. The expedition blimp was inaugurated during a ceremony in Marseille — it was christened Total Pole Airship, after the sponsor Total. The blimp arrived in France from Russia (whe...
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Friday, 21 September 2007 15:40
Supporting Documents for YSC/APECS Meeting
The IPY International Programme Office (IPO) has recently received some sponsorship to seed a meeting of the IPY International Youth Steering Committee (IYSC), including the Association of Polar Early Career Scientists (APECS). This meeting will occur in Stockholm at the end of September. Below is background material for this meeting.
Meeting Details (252 KB DOC) includes participants, overview, agenda, and logistics
Planning Information and Summary (128 KB PDF)
APEC...
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Saturday, 15 September 2007 14:54
Climate Change is Colour Change
Summary: The complete story of all IPY focuspoints, expressed in one videoart clip. No words, only moving pictures. Showing a silent but dramatic process in nature and culture.
produced by Ap Verheggen, 2007
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The video is recorded in Nunavut, Canada, as well as at Cap Nez, France.
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My name i...
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