Geomorphologist and student team head to Antarctica

Geomorphologist and student team head to Antarctica Completing work they began last November, University of North Dakota geomorphologist Dr. Jaakko Putkonen and a student team soon head again to one of Antarctica’s remotest ice free valleys. The expedition is funded by the National Science Foundatio...

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Main Author: Pedrazza, Juan
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: UND Scholarly Commons 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://commons.und.edu/features-archive/124
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spelling ftunivndakota:oai:commons.und.edu:features-archive-1123 2023-05-15T13:35:07+02:00 Geomorphologist and student team head to Antarctica Pedrazza, Juan 2011-11-22T08:00:00Z https://commons.und.edu/features-archive/124 unknown UND Scholarly Commons https://commons.und.edu/features-archive/124 UND News Features text 2011 ftunivndakota 2022-09-14T06:13:14Z Geomorphologist and student team head to Antarctica Completing work they began last November, University of North Dakota geomorphologist Dr. Jaakko Putkonen and a student team soon head again to one of Antarctica’s remotest ice free valleys. The expedition is funded by the National Science Foundation. They leave Wednesday and will be in Antarctica for about two months. Putkonen, a well-established expert in polar and high-mountain landscapes, will be accompanied on this trip by a hand-picked team of UND students: Ted Bibby, a PhD candidate in geology and an experienced cold-climate trekker; Collin Gi, a UND undergrad who’s going on his second Antarctic mission; and first-timer Erin Hoeft, a UND geology undergrad from Two Harbors, Minn., who jumped at this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to join the expedition. “Our mission this time is to collect more data and more samples and to go to places where we couldn’t get the last time we were there (in December 2010-January 2011),” Putkonen, who’s conducted research in several of the world’s remotest, coldest locations, including Antarctica and Greenland. The research aims to describe changes in the Antarctic landscape over time; some of that may reflect natural climate change while other indicators may help scientists understand more about human-generated climate change. Interesting twist “We’ll have to use a tortuous, cumbersome route to the field site,” Putkonen said. “Since we don’t have helicopters there this year, we will have to go there in a small airplane and land on the ice sheet, and hike quite a bit farther to our various sites; it’s real strenuous work.” “It’s a physically punishing trip because you’re working 2500 meters above sea level in a truly rough landscape,” said Putkonen, whose previous research missions include time in the high Arctic and in the Himalayas. “We all have to prepare physically for several months for this expedition, using stationary bikes and weights at the UND Wellness Center,” said Putkonen, who has stayed fit for all of his ... Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Arctic Climate change Greenland Ice Sheet UND Scholarly Commons (University of North Dakota) Antarctic Arctic Bibby ENVELOPE(-57.950,-57.950,-63.800,-63.800) Greenland Jaakko ENVELOPE(23.696,23.696,66.441,66.441) The Antarctic
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collection UND Scholarly Commons (University of North Dakota)
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language unknown
description Geomorphologist and student team head to Antarctica Completing work they began last November, University of North Dakota geomorphologist Dr. Jaakko Putkonen and a student team soon head again to one of Antarctica’s remotest ice free valleys. The expedition is funded by the National Science Foundation. They leave Wednesday and will be in Antarctica for about two months. Putkonen, a well-established expert in polar and high-mountain landscapes, will be accompanied on this trip by a hand-picked team of UND students: Ted Bibby, a PhD candidate in geology and an experienced cold-climate trekker; Collin Gi, a UND undergrad who’s going on his second Antarctic mission; and first-timer Erin Hoeft, a UND geology undergrad from Two Harbors, Minn., who jumped at this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to join the expedition. “Our mission this time is to collect more data and more samples and to go to places where we couldn’t get the last time we were there (in December 2010-January 2011),” Putkonen, who’s conducted research in several of the world’s remotest, coldest locations, including Antarctica and Greenland. The research aims to describe changes in the Antarctic landscape over time; some of that may reflect natural climate change while other indicators may help scientists understand more about human-generated climate change. Interesting twist “We’ll have to use a tortuous, cumbersome route to the field site,” Putkonen said. “Since we don’t have helicopters there this year, we will have to go there in a small airplane and land on the ice sheet, and hike quite a bit farther to our various sites; it’s real strenuous work.” “It’s a physically punishing trip because you’re working 2500 meters above sea level in a truly rough landscape,” said Putkonen, whose previous research missions include time in the high Arctic and in the Himalayas. “We all have to prepare physically for several months for this expedition, using stationary bikes and weights at the UND Wellness Center,” said Putkonen, who has stayed fit for all of his ...
format Text
author Pedrazza, Juan
spellingShingle Pedrazza, Juan
Geomorphologist and student team head to Antarctica
author_facet Pedrazza, Juan
author_sort Pedrazza, Juan
title Geomorphologist and student team head to Antarctica
title_short Geomorphologist and student team head to Antarctica
title_full Geomorphologist and student team head to Antarctica
title_fullStr Geomorphologist and student team head to Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Geomorphologist and student team head to Antarctica
title_sort geomorphologist and student team head to antarctica
publisher UND Scholarly Commons
publishDate 2011
url https://commons.und.edu/features-archive/124
long_lat ENVELOPE(-57.950,-57.950,-63.800,-63.800)
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op_source UND News Features
op_relation https://commons.und.edu/features-archive/124
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