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Published during the austral summer at McMurdo Station, Antarctica, for the United States Antarctic Program November 2, 2003 Science Breaking berg news all night long By Brien Barnett and Kristan Hutchison Sun Staff Stations hunker down during the long, cold Antarctic winter, but there is still science going on. Winter hits hard at the South Pole, with temperatures often dipping below –60 C. The cold and long continual night might dampen spirits, but it makes for good astronomical observa- tions. Over the summer, astronomical data is processed, instruments are fine- tuned and preparations are made for the next winter. Scientists have reported a few successes from the winter season: The AST/RO project (Antarctic Photo by Brien Barnett/The Antarctic Sun Submillimeter Telescope and Remote Ross Sea ice jams the channel where the mighty B15A iceberg broke apart earlier this month. The iceberg Observatory) explores the Galactic on the right retains the name B15A, while the iceberg on the left is now B15J. Barely visible is iceberg C16 Center, the inner 500 light years of the and Beaufort Island. A research team from McMurdo choppered out to B15A Friday to set up gear to track Milky Way. Over the winter, Chris the berg to its demise. B15A has been blamed for clogging McMurdo Sound with ice and disrupting pen- Martin and Karina Leppik explored guin colonies along the north coast of Ross Island. The breakup signals significant changes may be ahead. the submillimeter-wave of the region See story page 9 and discovered the Milky Way has explosive star formation episodes, or Long haul to the Ice starbursts, every 400 million years, according to Antony Stark of the Smithsonian Institution and head of By Kristan Hutchison attendants, the many bags of pretzels and the project. The team plans to publish Sun staff endless supply of drinks and meals served on the results in the Astrophysical Except for astronauts, few people have as plastic trays, the seats are still uncomfort- Journal Supplements in January. long a commute to work as those headed to able and the flight is still long. William Holzapfel reports that his jobs in Antarctica. But those first 10,000 km are the easy part team has published the results from For most, the trip to Antarctica begins of getting to the Ice. It’s the last 1,500 to high-resolution observations in 2002 with at least 12 hours on planes and in air- 3,800 km most people write home about, of the cosmic microwave back- ports, from their home in the U.S. to using descriptive phrases like “sardines in a ground (CMB) radiation using the Christchurch, New Zealand, or Punta can” and “tossed like a salad.” Which phrase ACBAR program (Arcminute Arenas, Chile. Despite the efforts of flight See Commute on page 13 See Winter on page 16 Inside Quote of the Week “Driving it is like driving the Ozone hole Current science Snoopy float in the Macy Day reinvents itself probes Drake Passage parade. Everyone smiles and Page 7 waves.” Page 15 - “Ivan the Terra Bus” driver www.polar.org/antsun 2 • The Antarctic Sun November 2, 2003 Ross Island Chronicles By Chico Mom, is it true Yes it is son, it’s that Antarctica also the home of is the coldest, our penguin windiest and colony. driest place in the world? Cold, hard facts Science Grantees for 2003/2004 season: 728 listed Penguin colony? Who is the This place is crazy penguin Aeronomy and Astrophysics pro- more like a penal who suggested colony. we live here in jects: 31 the first place? Biology and Medicine projects: 54 Geology and geophysics pro- jects: 25 Glaciology projects: 14 Oceans and Climate projects: 17 Artists and Writers: 8 projects I think we And why do you suppose you keep ought to file a getting these fantasies of being Clever acronym: POTATOE lawsuit against eaten by a killer whale? MOAT - Production Observations whoever sold us Through Another Translatitudinal this place. Oceanic Expedition: Alaska to Antarctica; the Mother Of All Transects Source: NSF Science Planning Summary The Antarctic Sunis funded by the National Science Foundation as part of the United States Antarctic Program (OPP- 000373). Its primary audience is U.S. Antarctic Program partici- pants, their families, and their friends. NSF reviews and approves material before publication, but opin- ions and conclusions expressed in the Sun are not necessarily those of the Foundation. Use:Reproduction and distribution are encouraged with acknowledgment of source and author. Senior Editor:Kristan Hutchison Editors: Brien Barnett Kris Kuenning Copy Editors:Geoff Jolley, Wendy Kober, JD Menezes Publisher:Valerie Carroll, Communications manager, RPSC Contributions are welcome.Contact the Sunat [email protected]. In McMurdo, visit our office in Building 155 or dial 2407. Web address:www.polar.org/antsun November 2, 2003 The Antarctic Sun • 3 Medevac patient home and well By Kristan Hutchison Sun staff I f Barry McCue hadn’t got- ten sick, he’d be waiting with the rest of the South Pole winter crew for flights to carry them to New Zealand. Instead, his flight came a month early. It was the third winter medevac from the Amunden-Scott South Pole Station in four years. “You can tell they’re get- ting better at the planning of it,” McCue said. “For me it was just take the plan off the shelf, blow the dust off and then just figure out what the people should do.” McCue, 51, had to be mede- Photo by Iain Airth/Rothera Station vaced after a gallbladder prob- A Kenn Borek Twin Otter heads to the South Pole from Rothera lem in late August spread to Station on Sept. 21 to pick up Barry McCue. his kidneys. South Pole Dr. Will Silva diagnosed the prob- way to McMurdo for the sum- would shower so I would smell lem, and after several telemed- mer. Sean Loutitt, the chief good.” icine consultations with doc- pilot for Kenn Borek Air, said On Sept. 21 one of the Twin tors in Galveston, Tex., he thought the workers at the Otters took off, while the sec- Denver, Boston and Baltimore, Pole were happier to see them ond stayed at Rothera as a it was agreed that McCue last month, perhaps because backup. needed to be flown back to the the medevac flight brought The temperature was United States for surgery. down 45 kg of tomatoes, avo- almost –60 C when they land- He had an infection in his cados and oranges. For the ed and the sun was edging its gallbladder that was probably winter crew, the fresh fruit was way to the horizon for the first caused by blockage with a their first since running out in time since March. Photo by Kristan Hutchison/The Antarctic Sun gallstone, said Dr. Ron mid-April. “It wasn’t dark, but because Barry McCue waits to board the Shemenski, medical director This time the flight was eas- it was cloudy you couldn’t air ambulance in Punta Arenas. for Raytheon Polar Services. If ier, partly because in the sum- really see the sun,” Loutitt the infection from the gallblad- mer there are more aircraft in said. said. “It’s the first time I didn’t der had gotten into the liver, it Antarctica to respond if some- The pilots parked the plane have to put my long johns on.” would probably have been thing goes wrong. on bamboo to prevent the skis From Punta Arenas he was fatal. For the winter flight, a sec- from freezing to the ice, then ambulanced in a Lear jet to As Environmental Health ond Twin Otter was flown to turned on heaters in the Galveston, Texas, where his and Safety officer for the Pole, Britain’s Rothera Station on engines and blanketed them gall bladder was removed. McCue is quick to point out he the Antarctic Peninsula as with insulated covers. They “I was sicker than I thought. didn’t ruin the station’s perfect backup and the McMurdo run- brought the battery inside dur- By the time I got to Galveston safety record for the season. way was prepared in case a C- ing the 10-hour crew rest. I was pretty wiped out,” Like the previous two winter 141 had to fly in from Before refueling, the pilots ran McCue said. medevacs, McCue was suffer- Christchurch. the plane around on the run- When he arrived home in ing from a medical condition “You plan around those way to warm the skis again so Chicago his daughters didn’t rather than the result of an possible scenarios. You check they wouldn’t stick to the recognize him. He was 22 kg accident. The 57-person com- for everything,” Loutitt said. snow. The extra caution thinner and had grown a gray- munity went eight months “In the end, I think it’s a pretty worked well and the pilots ing beard. He still needs fre- without a reportable injury, safe operation.” only needed half the runway, quent naps and hasn’t gained setting a record. Loutitt and the other two about 900 meters, for take off. the weight back yet, but he has “They embraced the idea pilots, Brian Crocker and Rob Coming straight from the had enough energy to visit that you wanted to come out Forbes, waited six days for the South Pole winter, McCue felt family on his motorcycle and the way you went in and I’m window of good weather they some culture shock as soon as give some interviews. the one they had to bail out,” needed to fly to the Pole and he reached Rothera, on the McCue plans to apply for a McCue said. back to Rothera. Antarctic peninsula. job in Antarctica again for the The Twin Otter plane tht “I was packed, boxed and “Walking in Rothera it got 2005 season. flew McCue was back at the ready to go,” McCue said. to me, feeling a breeze in my As he said a day after leav- South Pole last weekend on its “Whenever it looked good I face and it didn’t hurt,” McCue ing the South Pole, “I miss it.” 4 • The Antarctic Sun November 2, 2003 Perspectives sevitcepsreP Adventure and tragedy in the early Antarctic By Charles Bevilacqua “Willy Field” is now named in his Christmas 1955 found us within the I removed my memory. We would lose six more Antarctic Circle, in very rough, before we left for home in February stormy waters - the roaring 60’s. I 1957. heavy outer was one of the Seabees who had Eventually, the icebreakers broke volunteered to go to Antarctica on Operation in closer to Hut Point and we began, clothing and Deep Freeze I with Admiral Richard Byrd. with much hardship, to build the Approaching McMurdo, we soon first building at McMurdo. We boots and found a very bad ice year. Our ship was worked through the winter improv- held up more than 60 km from Hut Point, ing the station and preparing to go to where we were to construct the first jumped back the South Pole. buildings for the new station beside No one had been there since Scott’s Discovery Hut. out onto the broken ice, Amundsen and Scott in 1911-12. We By early January 1956, the situation flew there in a small, underpowered was desperate. Summer was rapidly into the water again. R4D-8 aircraft with flimsy skis in late going by. Ninety-three of us Seabees November 1956. Because we were the were supposed to stay the winter and first there, there was no landing field. nothing had been built yet to house us. Heavy tractors and sleds The plane touched down but could not stop or the skis would were lowered over the side of the ship and we began hauling stick to the snow. We had to jump out the door and dive under the building supplies miles over very treacherous and deteriorated tail as it flew by. ice. It was very unsafe, but we had to start. We did not even know the location of the pole when we On January 6, 1956 my small advance group was hauling arrived. It took Lt. Dick Bowers a few days to pinpoint the exact about four miles northeast of Cape Evans. We had passed over location of the geographic South Pole. many small ice cracks, but here we came upon a very large crack After completing most of Pole station, we turned it over to the with open water, too large to cross with tractor and sled, heavily new group coming in, but not before we were able to celebrate a loaded. most memorable Christmas, complete with an airdropped New The next day we built a timber bridge and pushed it across the Zealand Christmas tree and plenty of good cheer. It’s good to be crack. My fellow Seabee Construction Driver Third Class young! Richard Williams and I took a D-8 tractor up and over the bridge I came back to McMurdo early January 1957, in time to ded- without a sled in tow, to test the bridge. Petty officer Williams icate the shrine of volcanic stones and the Virgin Mary to Willy. was the driver while I was the lookout and guide. We crossed the Because Deep Freeze II was taking over, those of us in Deep bridge successfully. Then, about 15 meters beyond, the D-8 Freeze I had little to do. A few of us went over to help Sir broke through the weak ice without any warning. The D-8 pulled Edmund Hillary and the New Zealanders put up the original Willy and me under the ice. Scott Base. We stole much from our own Americans to help put Somehow I managed to claw my way through the broken ice in Scott Base. Who could resist those jolly Kiwis. It was a plea- to the surface. I immediately began pushing the broken ice aside, sure to work with them and to have a close association with looking for Willy. I could not find him. I was pulled out of the Hillary. water. I removed my heavy outer clothing and boots and jumped As I look back on a most memorable, rewarding and cherished back into the water again. experience, it’s amazing how many of us remain in contact. We I had to push more broken ice aside, make a hole and find have reunions and I still make frequent presentations on Willy. Try as I may, my efforts were to no avail. I was again Antarctica “then and now.” pulled from the water and went into slight shock and hypother- mia. I was put into another D-8 with the heat full on to try to Charles A. Bevilacqua was a 25-year-old chief petty officer in revive me. the U.S. Navy Seabees when he first went to Antarctica as chief Willy was our first loss on Deep Freeze I. “Williams Field” or builder. He now lives in Meredith, New Hampshire. This space reserved for your words There are lots of words for Antarctica: Cold Science White Research Glacial Adventure Remote Every Antarctic experience is different. Share yours on this page. Send submissions up to 800 words or queries to MCM-Antarctic Sun. November 2, 2003 The Antarctic Sun • 5 around the continent SOUTH POLE Eight month winter ends By Tracy Sheeley South Pole correspondent "Cookie" Jon Emanuel, Transition is the name of the game at head chef at Amundsen- Scott South Pole Station, South Pole Station this week, in a variety with a Dissostichus maw- of ways. soni, which was filleted The summer season opened on an over- for eating after scientific cast Oct. 25 with the arrival of 84 passen- work was carried out on gers on two flights. The end of winter cer- it. The fish was filleted, emony was held later that afternoon. sauteed, and served to Winter Site Manager Bill Henriksen called the South Pole winter crew when the summer each individual to receive his or her crew arrived. awards, which were presented by Al Photo by Kris Kuenning/The Antarctic Sun Sutherland, the National Science Foundation Representative in McMurdo. begins preparations this year. ICECUBE Ocean, with specific objectives for each is the next phase of the AMANDA subgroup. The study of physical forces The 57 people who spent the long winter (Antarctic Muon And Neutrino Detector helps to understand how the atmospheric, night here were recognized for their dedi- cation to Amundsen-Scott South Pole Array) Neutrino Telescope project. This is oceanic and sea ice processes affect the Station. They also made it through the a multiyear project destined to bring lots local ecosystems. What are the connec- of activity to the South Pole. tions between the changes of the climate entire eight-month winter without a single injury. Many of the 2003 winter crew will and the response of the ecosystem? What This winter was an historic one. For the depart their yearlong home this week. are the time and space scales on which the first time, residents, instead of work crews Those of us who remain salute each one, different ecological levels operate? and wish them safe and happy travels until To researchers examining the local inhabited the Elevated Station. Berthing areas and the new dining facility have our paths cross again. ecosystem on most levels of the food been in use since last March – and what a PALMER chain, emphasis is placed on certain points of the food chain, beginning with the pri- change it is! The rumor from the winter mary producers like phytoplankton, the crew is that the cooks were up to the chal- Science teams return lenge of the new space, and created fan- plants that survive in the Southern Ocean. tastic meals all winter. Feeding on them are krill, the secondary By Kerry Kells producers. Krill are prey for the penguins Summer crews are busy completing Palmer correspondent and other seabirds known as the apex turnover with the winter crew before they take off for greener pastures. It’s a chaot- Summer began at Palmer Station with predators. And the microbes wait to break ic but exciting week as we all try to catch the arrival of six of our eight science down and recycle the waste. Within each groups. Five of these groups are part of the of those, a variety of parameters are mon- up with old friends, make new ones and settle in for a busy summer season. New Long Term Ecological Research Project itored, from distributions of species popu- folks are taking it all in – absorbing all the (LTER), a collaborative project focusing lations to levels of nutrients in the water to nuances of this spot at the bottom of the on changes in the climate and how the patterns and disturbances of the research ecology responds in an ice-dominated sites. For example, how does climate world. The Pole staff greeted some early visi- environment. Established in the fall of warming affect changes to snow deposi- tors in the form of Kenn Borek Twin Otter 1990, Palmer LTER is just one of 24 tion, and how does this affect Adelie pen- LTER sites in the United States and guin populations? Research is also con- crews. Seven Otters stopped in at the Pole Antarctica. Near McMurdo, LTER ducted on the links of ecosystem process- for a good night’s sleep and to refuel themselves and their planes for their trip researches the Taylor Valley ecosystem. es to environmental variables and tracked on to McMurdo. We have an ambitious Here at Palmer, the represented science by satellite data. The U.S. LTER Network groups are Bill Fraser, Maria Vernet, web site explains that physical, optical, flight schedule lined up – 332 LC-130 Robin Ross and Langdon Quetin, chemical and biological models build flights to bring us everything from con- struction materials and science equipment Raymond Smith and Hugh Ducklow. these links. The Palmer LTER focuses on three to the occasional shipment of freshies. In science news, the ICECUBE project areas of marine ecology of the Southern See Palmer on page 6 the week in weather McMurdo Station Palmer Station South Pole Station High: 25F/-4C Low:-8F/-22C High: 38F/3C Low:27F/-3C High: -38F/-39C Low:-61F/-52C Wind: 28 mph/45 kph Wind: 60 mph/90 kph Wind: 25mph/40kph Windchill: -54F/-48C Windchill: 12F/-11C 6 • The Antarctic Sun November 2, 2003 Palmer and taking measurements along the way. Designed to insulate rather than cool, many areas of the NB Palmer became Over the course of the summer, I hope uncomfortably hot crossing the equator, to interview the researchers at Palmer Lowe said. Station to convey more in-depth informa- The NB Palmer arrived back in tion on the research conducted in our area. Lyttelton on Oct. 13 and is now headed With just the briefest introduction to toward the Ross Sea where it will support Palmer LTER, we can see how each ques- six projects this season. tion generates many more. What is now discovered? What milestones are passed? Laurence M. Gould Long Term Ecological research itself is Compiled from Sitreps by Steve Ager dynamic like the ecosystems that surround The research vessel Laurence M. Gould us here at Palmer Station. will be at dock in Punta Arenas until Nov. 7. The ship and crew recently completed a cruise to drop off the penguin researchers SHIPS and supplies for Copa field camp on King George Island and at Palmer Station. Photo provided by NB Palmercrew Nathaniel B. Palmer With the seas going their way and light Polar bears seen from the Nathaniel B. By Kristan Hutchison Palmer while cruising off Barrow, Alaska. winds, the trip there went great, wrote Marine Projects Coordinator Steve Ager. Sun staff temperature, salinity and depth at numer- Passengers sighted a dozen penguins on The Nathaniel B. Palmer is on its way ous predetermined locations, done using a the way. They arrived in the morning Oct. to the Ross Sea after a two-week port call probe called a CTD for Conductivity, 14 and ran two Zodiacs most of the day in Lyttelton, New Zealand. The port call Temperature and Depth. During the cruise unloading gear. By 2 p.m., it was all was a chance for the ship and crew to 329 CTDs were deployed, an all-time ashore. The base commander and a few recover from a cruise to the other side of record for the ship, said marine technician others from Polnearby Arctowski Station the world and back. Last spring, the NB Jesse Doren. The measurements will help came over to greet the Copa scientists, and Palmer was called upon to support an arc- researchers in the Shelf-Basin Interactions the ship crew delivered to them some tic research project after the Polar Sealost field program understand the exchanges of much-appreciated freshies. a five-ton blade from the starboard pro- heat, salt, nutrients and other organic mat- The Gould made another stop at the peller last summer while breaking ice in ter between the continental shelf and the Argentinian Jubany Station to pick up a McMurdo. The Polar Sea had been sched- Arctic Ocean. passenger and deliver another “happily uled for the arctic cruise, but had to go into In the arctic, the crew saw a couple received freshies order” to the Argentines. dry dock instead. The other Coast Guard hundred walrus, seals and about a dozen They still had time to duck into Deception icebreakers were already busy and the polar bears. Island for a quick shore visit at Whaler’s Canadian Coast Guard’s icebreaker was “Other than seeing the wildlife, we saw Bay before continuing to Palmer Station. unavailable because of unscheduled main- nothing,” Doren said. “It was really foggy, A few days later, the Gould returned to tenance. Since the NB Palmer was avail- cloudy, overcast, just gray.” Copa with additional supplies of frozen able, arrangements were made. They stopped in Barrow, which remind- food, double A batteries, 96 rolls of toilet The NB Palmer arrived in Dutch ed both Doren and Ashley Lowe of paper, some medicine, and a few other Harbor, Alaska, in time to celebrate July McMurdo, except more expensive. Lowe odds and ends. Fourth in the midnight twilight, then con- paid $17 for a burrito. On the return trip to Punta Arenas, the tinued up to Barrow. The main purpose of The voyage back to New Zealand took Gouldgot clobbered by 7.5 meter seas and the cruise was to collect measurements of a month and a half, doing seismic trials 35 knot winds crossing the Drake. “Shackelton's hut and “The first thing I did “I did not expect that emperor penguins. … was stand next to the so many different What surprised you It's surprising how tire [of Ivan the countries would be well the hut is pre- Terrabus] and take a conducting research most when you first served and the arti- photo. That was awe- with us on King facts are all there." some. I expected a van.” George Island.” arrived in Antarctica? Steve Jackson Frank Rinaldo Dave McWethy South Pole electrical fore- McMurdo Janitor from COPA seabird biologist man from Creed, Colo. Sherrill, New York from Victor, Idaho first season first season first season November 2, 2003 The Antarctic Sun • 7 Sept. 10, 2000 Sept. 24, 2002 Sept. 24, 2003 Ozone hole follows Antarctic weather trends By Kris Kuenning Antarctica, in summer, is the temporary years has the ozone hole been not as big as Sun staff home for more than 2,000 sun-conscious we were expecting.” Like a fickle pop star, the ozone hole people. Among them are scientists who Last year’s vortex actually split in two, reinvents itself each year. Thanks to a track the levels of ozone above the conti- causing two small ozone holes to go global clean-up act, the world’s most nent. Terry Deshler of the University of careening towards the edges of the famous atmospheric trend is already going Wyoming has been overseeing ozone Antarctic continent. Deshler said the vor- out of fashion. But in the meantime, the research in Antarctica since 1986, one year tex was sent into oscillation and then split great gap is simply a slave to polar weath- after the ozone hole was first discovered. in two by energy from frequent polar er patterns. Ozone is made up of three oxygen mol- storms. Last year, the hole in the ozone layer ecules (O ), brought together by the ener- This year, conditions conspired to make 3 surprised researchers by being small and gy of the sun. From its equatorial breeding one big hole. Peaking at 28 million km fragmented. This year, it’s just short of the ground, ozone travels through the upper square, it was the same size as the record largest recorded size. But these variations level of the atmosphere, the stratosphere, hole in 2000, according to the World are not related to the amount of ozone- and some of it is transported towards Meteorological Organization ozone bul- depleting chemicals in the environment. Earth’s poles. letin in 2003. That’s more than twice the Earth’s protective layer of ozone is on When the sun sets on the Antarctic size of Antarctica, its islands and ice track for a full recovery, but scientists summer, the dark air cools, causing a low shelves combined, or more than three expect a hole to appear around the polar pressure center called the polar vortex. times the size of the United States. regions once a year for at least the next 10 Because of the Earth’s rotation, warm air years. While the number of ozone-destroy- at the boundary can’t get in to the low- Inside the vortex ing chemicals in the atmosphere gradually pressure center. Inside the vortex, temper- With the launch of balloons into the begins to decline, variations in the size of atures plummet to below –79 C. stratosphere, scientists are able to tell the ozone hole are determined annually by It is in this vortex that the systematic exactly where ozone is lost in the atmos- polar weather. destruction of ozone occurs, so the size of phere’s profile. Ozone serves the planet by filtering the the vortex determines the size of the hole There may be a layer between 12 and dangerous spectra of ultraviolet light. in the ozone layer. 20 km above the earth where zero ozone is Ultraviolet-B light causes sunburn and “The size and stability of the polar vor- present, but above or below that, low lev- skin cancer in humans. It also has the abil- tex is determined by the amount of tropos- els of ozone still exist. The overall effect is ity to change the genetic makeup of plants pheric storm activity,” Deshler explained. more like a very thin layer of ozone than a and therefore alter the food chain. “A year with a lot of storms around the true hole. This year, with the ozone hole exceed- periphery of the continent of Antarctica So why does the ozone hole appear at ing the size of the Antarctic continent and can cause the polar vortex to become the poles and not over Jamaica? And why even exposing the southern tip of South unstable and make it smaller.” only in spring? The answers lie within the America, its effects will be tangible for Bad weather is good for minimizing the swirling polar vortex. people living in southern latitudes. While ozone hole, while less stormy weather There are three factors that come weathermen alert Chileans to dangerous brings a larger vortex. together to wipe out ozone – naturally levels of ultraviolet light, Australians and “In general, the vortex above occurring polar clouds, human-released New Zealanders should be spending Antarctica is quite stable and quite large,” Chloroflorocarbons (or CFCs) and the another spring under a thick paste of sun- Deshler said. Last year’s smaller hole was See Ozone on page 8 screen. unusual. “Only two times in the last 15 8 • The Antarctic Sun November 2, 2003 Ozone study goes global By Kris Kuenning Sun Staff Study of the ozone hole continues to be some of the most important research coming out of the Antarctic, drawing the attention of the world and focusing international collaboration. Even if the discovery of the ozone hole and its cause had been the only results to come from Antarctic research, that would be enough to jus- tify all the money invested, said British Antarctic Survey Deputy director John Dudeney. That research continues. In addition to the regular, annual spring research, Terry Deshler’s team from the University of Wyoming partici- pated this year in an international experiment to track and measure air parcels as they moved around the Antarctic continent. The project involved the coordinated release of measuring units known as ozone sondes from nine stations in Antarctica: South Pole (U.S.), Belgrano (Argentina & Finland), Dumont d’Urville (French), Marambio (Argentina & Spain), Neumayer (Germany), Rothera (UK), Syowa Photo by Anthony Powell/Scott Base (Japan), Davis (Australia), and McMurdo (U.S.). Olivia Billett and Rebecca Batchelor launch a balloon to measure ozone. Post-doctorate research assistant Jennifer Mercer said, “We would get an e-mail that Ozone From page 7 Belgrano launched a sonde four or five days ago and then we would launch ours.” magic ingredient – sunlight. ozone. Because polar stratospheric The timing of the releases was coordinated Ozone depletion is a result of human clouds exist only at the poles, 90 percent by the Alfred Wegner Institute in Potsdam, release of chloroflorocarbons into the of ozone destruction occurs there, Germany and 14 nations are involved in the atmosphere. CFC’s were first produced Mercer said. measurement and analysis campaign. in the 1930s as a completely safe refrig- The vortex forms in winter, but the The goal is to measure ozone in nearly the erant. During World War II, they were destruction doesn’t occur until the sun same air parcel from several locations and used as propellants in insecticide spray comes out in the spring. By mid- compare ozone changes in the air parcel with cans. October the warmer weather is already our understanding of ozone chemistry. In 1947, the first automobile air con- weakening the vortex to release its con- Coming this year... ditioner was developed using CFCs, and tents. Although gradual healing of the hole is production picked up further in the ‘50s Although a seasonal Antarctic ozone expected, predictions indicate the recovery may and ‘60s, when it reached 60 million hole is a foregone reality for at least the be delayed by the impact of global warming. tons. Up to 70 percent of that went next 10 years, the news is not all bad. Frank Murcray, from the University of Denver, directly into the air. Wind currents dis- By phasing out the production of CFCs, will be overseeing a project that aims to make tribute CFCs around the stratosphere. the Montreal Protocol agreement measurements of some of the chemical compo- The chemical makeup of ozone is reduced atmospheric CFC levels by nents that are involved in ozone chemistry. just one step away from the oxygen we more than 86 percent in 13 years. Satellite instruments don’t take measure- breathe. When the CFCs get broken up According to the World Bank’s ments as well in the darkness of winter so by the sun’s radiation, chlorine is Montreal Protocol Status Report, ground-based instruments can provide impor- released. The chlorine molecule then released on Sept. 17, 2003, annual con- tant additional data. This year, the team will has the power to extract one oxygen sumption of CFCs dropped from 1.1 install ground-based spectrometers at South atom from an ozone molecule, thus million tons in 1986 to 150,000 tons in Pole Station and McMurdo to study vortex- destroying ozone. 1999. related chemical and dynamic effects. “Chloride is an unhappy molecule Without the protocol, the report esti- “This will provide information on how the because it’s missing an electron,” mates consumption would have reached atmosphere has changed in intervening years. explained post-doctorate research assis- 3 million tons by 2010. We are hopeful that the extension of time cov- tant Jennifer Mercer. “It works as a cat- Deshler said the ozone story is a pos- erage and the comparison of current and his- alyst to the ozone, stripping off an O.” itive one. toric measurements will give a fairly complete In polar regions, the particles of “A global problem created by local picture of the status of ozone chemistry and polar stratospheric clouds provide an human activities was identified, and how it is changing since international treaties especially fertile staging area to convert reasonable solutions were adopted by have reduced chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) emis- chlorine, trapped in benign molecules, the world’s leading countries to reduce sion,” Murcray said. into an active state ready to destroy and eventually eliminate the problem.” November 2, 2003 The Antarctic Sun • 9 PPoopp ggooeess BB1155 Researchers hope to learn more from big berg’s breakup By Brien Barnett original B15 iceberg has spawned. B15 has Sun staff broken into 10 smaller icebergs (including Researchers tagged and bagged two B15A), most of which have since floated important icebergs Friday, weeks after the away from the area and to the north. giant B15A iceberg split in two earlier this According to MacAyeal, powerful winds month and mere days before a key member of up to 120 kph during a storm on Oct. 7 of the team was due to leave. played the primary role in snapping the berg. It was a Halloween treat for Doug The process that broke B15A came in MacAyeal, a glaciologist at the University three stages. First, two cracks had worked of Chicago, who headed a team that erected their way from opposite sides of the berg a weather and global positioning tower on toward the middle, but like a sawyer felling B15A. He returns to Chicago next week, a giant tree, didn’t exactly meet in the mid- though his team will remain at McMurdo dle. That middle kept the berg intact, but B15A conducting further research. now acted like a hitch on a truck. Another team set up a station on iceberg Next, the strong winds generated by the C16, which is to the southwest of B15A. storm blew north-northeast, pushing the ice- MacAyeal has wanted to track an iceberg berg. However, the wind also pushed the sur- C16 through its phases until it disappears to face of the water between Ross Island and write what he calls a “user’s guide to ice- the southern edge of the berg north. That cre- bergs.” He expects the instruments will pro- ated a slight depression of perhaps just a few vide key information about the movement centimeters over several kilometers – “an and disintegration of the massive objects. inclined plane,” as MacAyeal put it. The iceberg split into two pieces earlier The final act was the pull of gravity as this month after more than two years locked the southern third of the berg slipped back into position north of Ross Island. toward the hole and ripped free from the B15J While visiting the bergs Friday, more massive northern portion. Once the MacAyeal spotted additional fissures he storm subsided, the bergs drifted close to predicted may lead to further breakup of the one another, but were now separate. Even berg this year. though it is still immense, at 3,496 sq. km, On Oct. 9 Judy Shaffier, an analyst at the B15A is not the world’s largest iceberg. National Ice Center in Maryland, spotted That title goes to C19A, which, at 5,659 sq. the break in the B15 iceberg in a satellite km is residing in the so-called “iceberg photo and confirmed it using an infrared graveyard” near Durmont D’Urville, west image from another satellite. of the Ross Sea. The ice center named the smaller, south- MacAyeal, who has studied B15 from the McMurdo ern iceberg B15J. The larger, northern berg time it calved, or broke away from, the Ross retained the name B15A. The last letter indi- cates the succession of “child” bergs the See Berg on page 10 October 2003:B15A breaks and B15J is born N Ross Wind creates Island a “hole” in the sea, gravity Southern Wind gusts of Cracks that beats out the 30% of iceberg 121 kmh push started on wind to draw slips toward across surface opposite edges the berg hole and adds of northern meet as iceberg into the stress to cracks 70%, creating N is ripped apart hole that formed on opposing in a north- Graphic:Brien Barnett Source:Dr. Doug MacAyeal, opposite edges forces. south rift University of Wisconsin Note: graphic not to scale 10 • The Antarctic Sun November 2, 2003 as last year. According to the Oct. 20 Berg McMurdo sea ice report, this year’s ice From page 9 depth ranges from 1.5 m at the edges to 4.2 m under the sea ice runway, Ice Shelf in March 2000, predicted the Two icebreakers, the Polar Star and the breaking point some two years ago, but Polar Sea, are scheduled to leave Seattle in B15A was quite resilient. November and arrive in the area around And despite his nearly constant atten- Christmas, National Science Foundation tion over the last few years, MacAyeal Representative Al Sutherland said. learned about the split second-hand. He Sutherland said TERASCAN satellite was on his way to McMurdo when word images clearly show where the channel was was forwarded. cut last year, but said it doesn’t mean the ice “It was like watching a pot of water is thinner. come to a boil,” MacAyeal said. “We “The ice in the channel is more rugged watched it for more than two years and it and busted up than the surrounding fast cracked when we looked away.” ice,” he said. “Boulders the size of buses Nevertheless, MacAyeal sees the now and locomotives have frozen back together independent bergs as a big opportunity to again. Even though the annual sea ice is study how icebergs live and die. There are much less in extent than it was last year, the now weather stations on all three bergs. breaking of the channel, through very thick MacAyeal said he hopes the newly ice, will remain a challenge. Unless there is installed weather and GPS station on a dramatic natural breakout of the multi- B15A will remain with the iceberg until Photo by Brien Barnett/The Antarctic Sun year fast ice, ice-breaking this year may not the end, eventually disappearing into the Iceberg expert Doug MacAyeal adjusts be appreciably easier this year when com- ocean with it. wires on the weather and GPS station that pared to last.” was installed Friday on B15A, which will He has identified at least four more The primary question now is what will be tracked until it disintegrates. cracks on the two icebergs that could the icebergs do this year. It’s anybody’s cause them to further break up. But that McMurdo sea ice outlook guess, said MacAyeal, the iceberg doesn’t mean there isn’t valuable data to B15 is the prime suspect as the cause of researcher. Additionally, another iceberg-to- be gathered. thick fast, or attached, ice around Ross be seems looming on the Ross Ice Shelf. A It will take a long time for the bergs to Island. It is thought the iceberg interrupts stress fracture near 177W (the western edge clear out and disintegrate, perhaps many the normal ocean currents, according to of the original B15) has become more pro- years, MacAyeal said. working theories. Several years of thick ice nounced during the past few years and is The bergs generally are locked into the required two U.S. Coast Guard icebreakers being monitored, Shaffier said. same place they’ve been for the last few to clear the channels. There is a chance B15A will move north years. The sea ice forecast from the National quickly and follow the normal iceberg track That spot, against Ross Island to the Ice Center for this year estimates only about to Cape Adare, both MacAyeal and Shaffier south, C16 to the southwest and Franklin 30 km of annual fast ice, compared with said. However, Shaffier has noticed B15A Island to the northwest, appears to be an nearly 90 km last year. However, near and B15J are moving in roughly the same avenue for ocean currents that sweep McMurdo Sound and Hut Point the second- pattern as the original B15 and she doesn’t annual sea ice out of McMurdo Sound. and third-year ice is expected to be as thick expect the cork to pop quickly. What B15 split means for Crozier’s emperor penguins By Brien Barnett “I felt that there is a pretty high level of summer and are not dependent upon stable Sun staff adult mortality,” Kooyman said. “If there fast ice, as are the emperors. The iceberg B15 has made life confus- wasn’t much, then I would think that the The main effect of B15, Ainley said, is ing and sometimes deadly for the penguins colony would bounce right back.” that the Adelies from Cape Crozier had to of Cape Crozier. Kooyman said he believes the destruc- move farther east to find food, and that for- Over the last two years B15 wreaked tion caused by B15A is not normal, but he tunately the staples of the food chain also havoc on the emperor penguin colony at isn’t completely sure of the birds’ fate. moved east, likely due to the changes in Cape Crozier, which depends on stable sea Certainly many adult emperor penguins ocean currents brought by the bergs. ice to incubate their eggs. On the other and all chicks died, but even annual popu- Ainley and Ballard soon will be in hand, the increased fast ice west of iceberg lation counts were next-to-impossible this Antarctica to continue their research, again C16, adjacent to B15, lead to better condi- year given the amount of ice debris and the focusing on birds that previously nested at tions for the emperor penguins at the much danger in attempting to reach the area. Cape Royds and Cape Byrd on Ross larger Beaufort Island colony. “Most of the damage is already done,” Island’s western edge. Penguin researcher Gerald Kooyman of Kooyman said. “All of the trash bergs and In the past two seasons, many of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography esti- trash ice that’s in there are still causing Royds and Byrd penguins opted for Cape mates nearly 75 percent of the emperor problems.” Crozier, because there was no fast ice penguins previously counted at Cape David Ainley and Grand Ballard, who there, and all the fast ice in McMurdo Crozier are no longer around. On a visit to study the smaller Adelie penguins at the Sound out to Beaufort Island had discour- the area this year, Kooyman and his team Ross Island colonies, said those birds aged them from their normal routine. found few emperors remaining and many seemed to adapt well to B15, even if they Kooyman and Ainley both said more bodies of adults buried in ice, as well as were a bit confused at first. As well, the research, and time, will tell what the effect unhatched eggs and dead hatchlings. Adelies breed much later in the year in of B15 will be.

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Nov 2, 2003 plans to publish the results in the Astrophysical team has published the results from . air ambulance in Punta Arenas. movie marathon.
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