Polaris: Catalyzing Demographic Change in the Arctic Research Community through an Immersive and Sustained Undergraduate Research Experience

This project is integrating scientific research in the Arctic with education and outreach, with a strong central focus on engaging undergraduate students and visiting faculty from groups that have had little involvement in Arctic science to date. Science and society in the United States will be stro...

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Main Authors: Sarah Ludwig, Robert M Holmes, Susan Natali, Paul Mann, John Schade, Jordan Jimmie, Emily Bristol, Darcy Peter, Jessica Dabrowski, Laura Jardine, Homero Pena, Edauri Navarro-Perez, Nadia Sae-Lim, Sierra Melton
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:656880fc-a737-48aa-9468-0b3b4c943d44
id dataone:urn:uuid:656880fc-a737-48aa-9468-0b3b4c943d44
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:urn:uuid:656880fc-a737-48aa-9468-0b3b4c943d44 2023-11-08T14:14:16+01:00 Polaris: Catalyzing Demographic Change in the Arctic Research Community through an Immersive and Sustained Undergraduate Research Experience Sarah Ludwig Robert M Holmes Susan Natali Paul Mann John Schade Jordan Jimmie Emily Bristol Darcy Peter Jessica Dabrowski Laura Jardine Homero Pena Edauri Navarro-Perez Nadia Sae-Lim Sierra Melton These data are from the Yukon-Kuskokwim River Delta, Alaska, approximately halfway between Bethel and St. Mary's. The region recently burned in 2015 and has older burns from 1972. The area is flat with numerous lakes and wetlands. Terrestrial landscapes are peat plateaus roughly 1-3 meters above wetlands, stream, and lakes. ENVELOPE(-163.3736,-162.3953,61.3053,61.1861) BEGINDATE: 2017-06-25T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2017-08-10T00:00:00Z 2018-04-03T17:16:53.225Z https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:656880fc-a737-48aa-9468-0b3b4c943d44 unknown Arctic Data Center Dataset dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC 2023-11-08T13:41:11Z This project is integrating scientific research in the Arctic with education and outreach, with a strong central focus on engaging undergraduate students and visiting faculty from groups that have had little involvement in Arctic science to date. Science and society in the United States will be stronger in the long-term if the scientific workforce more closely reflects the racial, ethnic, and cultural diversity of its residents. The Arctic research community currently does not. Of the Principal Investigators funded by NSF's Arctic programs in the past five years, only 1% were African American, Hispanic, Native American, or Alaska Native. This project is catalyzing change in these demographics by engaging faculty from Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs) and a diverse group of undergraduate students in cutting-edge Arctic research and providing them encouragement, mentoring, and opportunities to continue pursuing Arctic studies in subsequent years. The central element of the project is a month-long research expedition to the Yukon River Delta in Alaska. The expedition provides a deep intellectual and cultural immersion in the context of an authentic research experience that is paramount for "hooking" students and keeping them moving along the pipeline to careers as Arctic scientists. The overarching scientific issue that drives the research is the vulnerability and fate of ancient carbon stored in Arctic permafrost (permanently frozen ground). Widespread permafrost thaw is expected to occur this century, but large uncertainties remain in estimating the timing, magnitude, and form of carbon that will be released when thawed. Project participants are working in collaborative research groups to make fundamental scientific discoveries related to the vulnerability of permafrost carbon in the Yukon River Delta and the potential implications of permafrost thaw in this region for the global climate system. Dataset Arctic Kuskokwim Peat permafrost Polaris: Catalyzing Demographic Change in the Arctic Research Community through an Immersive and Sustained Undergraduate Research Experience Yukon river Alaska Yukon Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) Arctic Yukon ENVELOPE(-163.3736,-162.3953,61.3053,61.1861)
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Data Center (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC
language unknown
description This project is integrating scientific research in the Arctic with education and outreach, with a strong central focus on engaging undergraduate students and visiting faculty from groups that have had little involvement in Arctic science to date. Science and society in the United States will be stronger in the long-term if the scientific workforce more closely reflects the racial, ethnic, and cultural diversity of its residents. The Arctic research community currently does not. Of the Principal Investigators funded by NSF's Arctic programs in the past five years, only 1% were African American, Hispanic, Native American, or Alaska Native. This project is catalyzing change in these demographics by engaging faculty from Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs) and a diverse group of undergraduate students in cutting-edge Arctic research and providing them encouragement, mentoring, and opportunities to continue pursuing Arctic studies in subsequent years. The central element of the project is a month-long research expedition to the Yukon River Delta in Alaska. The expedition provides a deep intellectual and cultural immersion in the context of an authentic research experience that is paramount for "hooking" students and keeping them moving along the pipeline to careers as Arctic scientists. The overarching scientific issue that drives the research is the vulnerability and fate of ancient carbon stored in Arctic permafrost (permanently frozen ground). Widespread permafrost thaw is expected to occur this century, but large uncertainties remain in estimating the timing, magnitude, and form of carbon that will be released when thawed. Project participants are working in collaborative research groups to make fundamental scientific discoveries related to the vulnerability of permafrost carbon in the Yukon River Delta and the potential implications of permafrost thaw in this region for the global climate system.
format Dataset
author Sarah Ludwig
Robert M Holmes
Susan Natali
Paul Mann
John Schade
Jordan Jimmie
Emily Bristol
Darcy Peter
Jessica Dabrowski
Laura Jardine
Homero Pena
Edauri Navarro-Perez
Nadia Sae-Lim
Sierra Melton
spellingShingle Sarah Ludwig
Robert M Holmes
Susan Natali
Paul Mann
John Schade
Jordan Jimmie
Emily Bristol
Darcy Peter
Jessica Dabrowski
Laura Jardine
Homero Pena
Edauri Navarro-Perez
Nadia Sae-Lim
Sierra Melton
Polaris: Catalyzing Demographic Change in the Arctic Research Community through an Immersive and Sustained Undergraduate Research Experience
author_facet Sarah Ludwig
Robert M Holmes
Susan Natali
Paul Mann
John Schade
Jordan Jimmie
Emily Bristol
Darcy Peter
Jessica Dabrowski
Laura Jardine
Homero Pena
Edauri Navarro-Perez
Nadia Sae-Lim
Sierra Melton
author_sort Sarah Ludwig
title Polaris: Catalyzing Demographic Change in the Arctic Research Community through an Immersive and Sustained Undergraduate Research Experience
title_short Polaris: Catalyzing Demographic Change in the Arctic Research Community through an Immersive and Sustained Undergraduate Research Experience
title_full Polaris: Catalyzing Demographic Change in the Arctic Research Community through an Immersive and Sustained Undergraduate Research Experience
title_fullStr Polaris: Catalyzing Demographic Change in the Arctic Research Community through an Immersive and Sustained Undergraduate Research Experience
title_full_unstemmed Polaris: Catalyzing Demographic Change in the Arctic Research Community through an Immersive and Sustained Undergraduate Research Experience
title_sort polaris: catalyzing demographic change in the arctic research community through an immersive and sustained undergraduate research experience
publisher Arctic Data Center
publishDate
url https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:656880fc-a737-48aa-9468-0b3b4c943d44
op_coverage These data are from the Yukon-Kuskokwim River Delta, Alaska, approximately halfway between Bethel and St. Mary's. The region recently burned in 2015 and has older burns from 1972. The area is flat with numerous lakes and wetlands. Terrestrial landscapes are peat plateaus roughly 1-3 meters above wetlands, stream, and lakes.
ENVELOPE(-163.3736,-162.3953,61.3053,61.1861)
BEGINDATE: 2017-06-25T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2017-08-10T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-163.3736,-162.3953,61.3053,61.1861)
geographic Arctic
Yukon
geographic_facet Arctic
Yukon
genre Arctic
Kuskokwim
Peat
permafrost
Polaris: Catalyzing Demographic Change in the Arctic Research Community through an Immersive and Sustained Undergraduate Research Experience
Yukon river
Alaska
Yukon
genre_facet Arctic
Kuskokwim
Peat
permafrost
Polaris: Catalyzing Demographic Change in the Arctic Research Community through an Immersive and Sustained Undergraduate Research Experience
Yukon river
Alaska
Yukon
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