Articles & Interviews

Sciencepoles articles look at key findings from a range of polar science and research fields. Our articles RSS feed will inform you when new articles are published on this website.

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    Lene Kielsen Holm: How Climate Change and Socio-economics Are Affecting Greenland Inuit

    20.10.2009

    Traditions, language, and knowledge about sea ice are currently strongin Inuit communities in Northwestern Greenland. However despite effortsto keep their heritage alive, Inuit living in this corner of the planetare nonetheless affected by climate change and the preservation ofindigenous knowledge is being affected by external factors.

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    Claudio Aporta: Investigating What Canadian Inuit Know about Sea Ice

    12.10.2009

    Dr. Claudio Aporta is the principal investigator for the ISIUOP (Inuit Sea Ice Use andOccupancy Project), the Canadian component ofthe IPY Sea Ice Knowledge and Use (SIKU) project (IPY project n° 166). ISIUOP has been running for three seasons in Inuit communities in Eastern Canada and is currently wrapping up…

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    Igor Krupnik: Documenting Arctic Peoples Knowledge and Use of Sea Ice

    06.10.2009

    Indigenous people who live on the Chukchi Peninsula in the Russian Far East and in Western Alaska have experienced a dramatic shift in their sea ice use and knowledge over the past two generations. Several indigenous languages traditionally spoken in the region are on the decline, and in many communities…

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    Examining Indigenous Sea Ice Knowledge and Use

    05.10.2009

    For many indigenous communities that have lived in the Arctic for millennia, sea ice has been an integral part of their living environment. As a place where they have spent a significant part of their lives hunting, fishing and even dwelling on the ice, the intimate understanding of sea ice…

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    Francesco Frati: What Can the Genetic Makeup of Antarctic Springtails Tell Us?

    01.09.2009

    For as long as life has existed on Earth, environmental factors have had a significant influence over where a particular organism can live and to what extent it can thrive. Yet the environment can also ultimately influence the genetic structure of a given population of organisms, as Dr. Franceso Frati…

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    Hugh Ducklow: Long Term Ecological Research at Palmer Station

    31.07.2009

    So far most of Antarctica has not been greatly affected by climate change, at least as far as researchers can tell. However there is one place in Antarctica that has witnessed some of the most drastic changes on the planet: the Antarctic Peninsula. Here temperatures have been rising, sea ice…

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    Thomas Puestow on Polar View Meeting User Needs in the IPY and Beyond

    09.07.2009

    Since 2003 Polar View and its predecessor, Northern View, have been providing Earth observation services to a wide variety of end users all over the planet. These services include everything from ice charts to help ships navigate in polar waters to monitoring melting snow and glaciers to improve meltwater runoff…

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    Thomas Puestow on the Emergence of Polar View as a Major Player in Earth Observation Services

    08.07.2009

    Since 2003 Polar View and its predecessor, Northern View, have been providing Earth observation services to a wide variety of end users all over the planet. These services include everything from ice charts to help ships navigate in polar waters to monitoring melting snow and glaciers to improve meltwater runoff…

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    The State of Polar Research: A Preliminary Report on IPY Research

    26.02.2009

    Marking the official end of the Fourth International Polar Year (IPY) in Geneva, Switzerland on 25 February 2009, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and the International Council for Science (ICSU) have co-published a preliminary report entitled "The State of Polar Research", which provides an outline of what has been learned…

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    The LGP: Using the Victoria Land Coast as a Proxy for Climate Change in Antarctica

    19.02.2009

    What might happen to terrestrial and marine ecosystems in the Antarctic as climate change progresses is a question that has interested researchers working on the planet's southernmost continent for some time.

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