Extreme summer melt: Assessing the habitability and physical structure of rotting first-year Arctic sea ice. Chukchi Sea, Alaska. 2015-2018

The response of Arctic sea ice to a warming climate includes decreases in extent, lower ice concentration, and reduced ice thickness. Summer melt seasons are lengthening with earlier melt onsets and later autumn freezeups. We believe this will likely lead to an increase in so-called "rotten ice...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Karen Junge
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.18739/A28C9R366
id dataone:doi:10.18739/A28C9R366
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:doi:10.18739/A28C9R366 2024-06-03T18:46:22+00:00 Extreme summer melt: Assessing the habitability and physical structure of rotting first-year Arctic sea ice. Chukchi Sea, Alaska. 2015-2018 Karen Junge Chukchi Sea near Barrow, Alaska ENVELOPE(-156.5281,-156.5281,71.3755,71.3755) BEGINDATE: 2015-05-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2018-12-31T00:00:00Z 2017-10-31T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.18739/A28C9R366 unknown Arctic Data Center sea ice, Arctic, ice melt, sea ice polymers, sea ice bacteria, algae, polymers Barrow, Alaska Chukchi Sea, Xray computed tomography Dataset 2017 dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC https://doi.org/10.18739/A28C9R366 2024-06-03T18:11:09Z The response of Arctic sea ice to a warming climate includes decreases in extent, lower ice concentration, and reduced ice thickness. Summer melt seasons are lengthening with earlier melt onsets and later autumn freezeups. We believe this will likely lead to an increase in so-called "rotten ice" in the Arctic at the end of summer. This ice has experienced a long summer of melt, is fragile, difficult to work with, and has received little attention. Comprehensive information on its physical and microbiological properties does not exist. This data set was generated to address two main objectives: determination of the physical and microbial characteristics and microstructural evolution of sea ice exposed to severe melt exploration of the influence of biogenic particles such as sea ice algae, bacteria and polymer gels on the melting behavior of sea ice This research developed and applied state-of-the-art microbiological, molecular, biogeochemical and geophysical techniques to examine the character and evolution of natural Arctic sea ice at the end of the melt season at field sites near Barrow, Alaska. This project assessed: ice physical characteristics (ice density, salinity, permeability, albedo, and microstructure) using standard and novel microscopy and X-ray computed tomography techniques ice algal and bacterial characteristics (abundance, activity, biomass, and diversity) using epifluorescence microscopy, flow cytometry and massively parallel taq sequencing techniques polymer gel characteristics (abundance, gel carbon biomass, and size) using flow cytometry and techniques. CT scans of the collected ice core samples are included in zip file format. Each file contains several hundred images of a specific sample. More information about each sample can be found in "CT_Core_Metadata.xlsx" and "CT_Core_Metadata_reformatted.csv". Dataset albedo Arctic Barrow Chukchi Chukchi Sea Extreme summer melt: Assessing the habitability and physical structure of rotting first-year Arctic sea ice ice algae ice core Sea ice Alaska Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) Arctic Chukchi Sea Rotten ENVELOPE(-53.417,-53.417,68.867,68.867) ENVELOPE(-156.5281,-156.5281,71.3755,71.3755)
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Data Center (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC
language unknown
topic sea ice, Arctic, ice melt, sea ice polymers, sea ice bacteria, algae, polymers
Barrow, Alaska
Chukchi Sea, Xray computed tomography
spellingShingle sea ice, Arctic, ice melt, sea ice polymers, sea ice bacteria, algae, polymers
Barrow, Alaska
Chukchi Sea, Xray computed tomography
Karen Junge
Extreme summer melt: Assessing the habitability and physical structure of rotting first-year Arctic sea ice. Chukchi Sea, Alaska. 2015-2018
topic_facet sea ice, Arctic, ice melt, sea ice polymers, sea ice bacteria, algae, polymers
Barrow, Alaska
Chukchi Sea, Xray computed tomography
description The response of Arctic sea ice to a warming climate includes decreases in extent, lower ice concentration, and reduced ice thickness. Summer melt seasons are lengthening with earlier melt onsets and later autumn freezeups. We believe this will likely lead to an increase in so-called "rotten ice" in the Arctic at the end of summer. This ice has experienced a long summer of melt, is fragile, difficult to work with, and has received little attention. Comprehensive information on its physical and microbiological properties does not exist. This data set was generated to address two main objectives: determination of the physical and microbial characteristics and microstructural evolution of sea ice exposed to severe melt exploration of the influence of biogenic particles such as sea ice algae, bacteria and polymer gels on the melting behavior of sea ice This research developed and applied state-of-the-art microbiological, molecular, biogeochemical and geophysical techniques to examine the character and evolution of natural Arctic sea ice at the end of the melt season at field sites near Barrow, Alaska. This project assessed: ice physical characteristics (ice density, salinity, permeability, albedo, and microstructure) using standard and novel microscopy and X-ray computed tomography techniques ice algal and bacterial characteristics (abundance, activity, biomass, and diversity) using epifluorescence microscopy, flow cytometry and massively parallel taq sequencing techniques polymer gel characteristics (abundance, gel carbon biomass, and size) using flow cytometry and techniques. CT scans of the collected ice core samples are included in zip file format. Each file contains several hundred images of a specific sample. More information about each sample can be found in "CT_Core_Metadata.xlsx" and "CT_Core_Metadata_reformatted.csv".
format Dataset
author Karen Junge
author_facet Karen Junge
author_sort Karen Junge
title Extreme summer melt: Assessing the habitability and physical structure of rotting first-year Arctic sea ice. Chukchi Sea, Alaska. 2015-2018
title_short Extreme summer melt: Assessing the habitability and physical structure of rotting first-year Arctic sea ice. Chukchi Sea, Alaska. 2015-2018
title_full Extreme summer melt: Assessing the habitability and physical structure of rotting first-year Arctic sea ice. Chukchi Sea, Alaska. 2015-2018
title_fullStr Extreme summer melt: Assessing the habitability and physical structure of rotting first-year Arctic sea ice. Chukchi Sea, Alaska. 2015-2018
title_full_unstemmed Extreme summer melt: Assessing the habitability and physical structure of rotting first-year Arctic sea ice. Chukchi Sea, Alaska. 2015-2018
title_sort extreme summer melt: assessing the habitability and physical structure of rotting first-year arctic sea ice. chukchi sea, alaska. 2015-2018
publisher Arctic Data Center
publishDate 2017
url https://doi.org/10.18739/A28C9R366
op_coverage Chukchi Sea near Barrow, Alaska
ENVELOPE(-156.5281,-156.5281,71.3755,71.3755)
BEGINDATE: 2015-05-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2018-12-31T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-53.417,-53.417,68.867,68.867)
ENVELOPE(-156.5281,-156.5281,71.3755,71.3755)
geographic Arctic
Chukchi Sea
Rotten
geographic_facet Arctic
Chukchi Sea
Rotten
genre albedo
Arctic
Barrow
Chukchi
Chukchi Sea
Extreme summer melt: Assessing the habitability and physical structure of rotting first-year Arctic sea ice
ice algae
ice core
Sea ice
Alaska
genre_facet albedo
Arctic
Barrow
Chukchi
Chukchi Sea
Extreme summer melt: Assessing the habitability and physical structure of rotting first-year Arctic sea ice
ice algae
ice core
Sea ice
Alaska
op_doi https://doi.org/10.18739/A28C9R366
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