Space Travel News  
Canada Scientists Peer Into Arctic Abyss, To See Future

The Arctic ice cap.
by Michel Comte
Ottawa (AFP) March 01, 2007
Canadian-led scientists plan to peer into big cracks in the Arctic ice cap hoping to glimpse the future of navigation along the famed Northwest Passage from Europe to Asia, a researcher told AFP Thursday. The program is sponsored by the International Polar Year, the largest global research effort of its kind, involving thousands of scientists from more than 60 countries and 220 research and outreach projects.

"There's been an incredible decrease in ice volume, and if the rate of decline continues, we're going to have a seasonally ice-free Arctic in 30 to 50 years," said Tim Papakyriakou, a lead researcher at the University of Manitoba.

Scientists believe that global warming could open up the Northwest Passage along Canada's northern coast to year-round shipping by 2050, reducing a sea trip from London to Tokyo by more than 5,000 kilometers (3,000 miles), and allowing Arctic resource exploitation.

By peering into cracks in the ice to the ocean floor, scientists hope to get "a first look at what we'd expect the situation to be like then," Papakyriakou told AFP.

The so-called flaw leads develop between the permanent polar ice cap and coastal ice.

More than 200 researchers from 14 countries will embark on this first roving year-round exploration of the Arctic aboard a retrofitted Canadian ice-breaker, focusing on the western fringe of the Arctic Islands.

Researchers will probe the depths of the Arctic Ocean and spy on its fragile ecosystem, hoping to discover new species and measure how they adapt to changing sea temperatures.

Aboard their floating laboratory, the scientists will analyze water columns and atmospheric changes, and map the ocean bottom to better understand the possible impact of future development in this frigid environment, Papakyriakou said.

Since 1978, the extent of Arctic sea ice has been shrinking by 2.7 percent on average each decade, with the summer ice declining by about 7.4 percent, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

At the higher end of current greenhouse-gas estimates, large areas of the Arctic Ocean could be ice-free all year round by the end of the century, bringing a substantial increase in shipping traffic and oil and gas exploration.

The 1.5 billion-dollar International Polar Year program will study the north and south poles over the next two years.

With nearly 25 percent of the entire Arctic located within its boundaries, Canada pledged 150 million Canadian dollars (128 million US) for 44 projects to investigate climate change impacts and adaptations of northern communities.

This planned peek into the Arctic abyss is the biggest project of the bunch, costing about 40 million Canadian dollars (34 million US), officials said.

Source: Agence France-Presse

Related Links
Beyond the Ice Age
Beyond the Ice Age



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Comprehensive Research Network Needed For The Arctic Region
Columbus OH (SPX) Feb 22, 2007
An Ohio State University geologist today outlined a new plan to oceanographers that would consolidate much of the world's studies on the Arctic region into a global observation network. "This is basically a plan to better understand how the Arctic is changing, but doing it in a new systematic, international and 'pan-Arctic' way," explained Berry Lyons, professor in the School of Earth Sciences and Director of the Byrd Polar Research Center at Ohio State University.







  • X PRIZE Foundation Raises $2.7 Million At Gala Hosted At Google
  • When Washed In Sunlight Asteroids Hit The Spin Cycle
  • NASA Completes Orion Spacecraft Review
  • Korolev R-7 Rocket Leads The Field For Reliability

  • Ariane 5 Mission Is A "Go"
  • Russia May Open New Space Launch Site
  • Hyundai To Build First South Korea Launch Pad
  • Construction Of Soyuz Launch Base In French Guiana Begins

  • Shuttle Back In Vehicle Assembly Building
  • Space Shuttle Atlantis Rolls Back
  • Fuel To Be Removed From Space Shuttle
  • Space Shuttle Atlantis External Tank Hit By Major Hail Storm On Pad

  • South Korean Astronauts For Flight To ISS Start Training
  • No Adjustment To ISS Orbit Due To Atlantis Launch Postponement
  • Space Station Safety Report Released
  • ISS Crew Complete Hour Space Walk As Next Shuttle Crew Conduct Dry Countdown

  • NASA Budget Tucked Away For Now But Hard Decisions Only Deferred
  • Astronaut Fired A Month After Kidnap Attempt
  • Astrophysicist Hawking To Try Out Weightlessness
  • Impossible For Great Wall To Be Visible With Naked Eye From From Space

  • Homemade Suit For Chinese Spacewalk
  • China To Prioritize Three Areas In Space Program
  • If You Love Me Order Some Purple Space Potatoes
  • China, US Have No Space Cooperation

  • Novel Salamander Robot Crawls Its Way Up The Evolutionary Ladder
  • Look Ma, No Hands, No Humans
  • Learning From Mistakes Next Challenge For Japanese Humanoids
  • Superbots In Action

  • Early Mars Had Underground Water System
  • Rosetta Delivers Phobos Transit Animation And Sees Mars In Stereo
  • SpaceDev's Starsys Division Awarded Contract For NASA Mars Science Explorer Mission
  • Where Is Beagle 2

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement