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Recent Polar Science and Climate Change news are featured here. Our news RSS feed will inform you when news are published on this website.

  • Loose Tooth Movements Tracked by Scientists

    03.04.2007

    Professor Richard Coleman, University of Tasmania, and his team have installed measuring devices to track movements of the "loose tooth", a 30 kilometre square chunk of shelf ice that's breaking away from the Amery Ice Shelf in Antarctica.

  • New Automated Cameras to Monitor Adelie Penguins

    03.04.2007

    In the framework of its long-running Adelie penguins monitoring programme, the Australian Antarctic Division recently developed an automated camera, powered by solar panels, to monitor aspects of the Adelie penguin's breeding chronology and chick survival.

  • A Warm Winter in the Arctic as Well

    02.04.2007

    Scientists of the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) and the German Aerospace Centre (DLR) concluded that unusual mild temperatures were preventing ice formation in the Arctic, specifically in the region around Spitsbergen.

  • Improved Monitoring of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet Needed to Evaluate Future Sea Level Rise

    02.04.2007

    Experts across a wide range of scientific disciplines from the United States and Europe met in Austin, Texas, to identify what should be done to reduce scientific uncertainty regarding the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) in regards to global sea level rise.

  • Launch of Association of Polar Early Career Scientists (APECS)

    02.04.2007

    The Association of Polar Early Career Scientists (APECS) aims to bring together young researchers and early career scientists and engineers with an interest in Polar Regions and the Cryosphere from around the world.

  • NASA and Local Arctic Communities Collaborate during IPY

    30.03.2007

    Changes in Arctic climate have resulted in changes in snow cover and snow conditions. Observing and understanding snow changes are important both for scientists and for local reindeer herders who have to know and even predict snow conditions, because they indicate availability of forage and mobility for herding.

  • Dust in Antarctic Ice Reveals Important Climate Clues

    30.03.2007

    Scientists from the Desert Research Institute in Nevada (USA) along with fellow colleagues examined the levels of atmospheric dust in an ice core obtained from James Ross Island at the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula. They found a close correspondence between recent climate warming and increases in atmospheric dust.

  • NASA Study: Greenland Ice Sheet Is Melting Much Faster than Expected

    28.03.2007

    Recent measurements of the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) launched by NASAand the German Aerospace Center show that Greenland's ice sheet is melting much faster than expected.

  • Climate Change Has Led to Decline in Alaska’s Sea Lion Population

    28.03.2007

    Studies by a team of scientists at the North Pacific Universities Marine Mammal Research Consortium reveal that an abrupt change in North Pacific Ocean conditions, which occurred 30 years ago, has affected today's Alaskan marine ecosystems. This sudden change may well be a leading factor in the decline of western…

  • ICESAR Campaign Paves the Way for Future Ice Monitoring

    28.03.2007

    An ambitious airborne campaign, lasting about three weeks, is now underway and achieving excellent results in the extreme north of Europe to support ESA's Sentinel-1 mission - which, amongst other application areas, will contribute to ice monitoring.

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