| on Apr 22, 2008, 02:33 PM E.S.T.
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RV Polarstern finished first Antarctic field season within the International Polar Year
Bremerhaven, April 21, 2008. The Antarctic deep sea gets colder, which
might stimulate the circulation of the oceanic water masses. This is
the first result of the Polarstern expedition of the Alfred Wegener
Institute for Polar and Marine Research in the Helmholtz Association
that has just ended in Punta Arenas/Chile. At the same time satellite
images from the Antarctic summer have shown the largest sea-ice extent
on record. In the coming years autonomous measuring buoys will be used
to find out whether the cold Antarctic summer induces a new trend or
was only a "slip".
The Polarstern expedition ANT-XXIV/3 was dedicated to examining the
oceanic circulation and the oceanic cycles of materials that depend on
it. Core themes were the projects CASO (Climate of Antarctica and the
Southern Ocean) and GEOTRACES, two of the main projects in the
Antarctic in the International Polar Year 2007/08.
Under the direction of Dr Eberhard Fahrbach, Oceanographer at the
Alfred Wegener Institute, 58 scientists from ten countries were on
board the research vessel Polarstern in the Southern Ocean from 6
February until 16 April, 2008. They studied ocean currents as well as
the distribution of temperature, salt content and trace substances in
Antarctic sea water. "We want to investigate the role of the Southern
Ocean for past, present and future climate," chief scientist Fahrbach
said. The sinking water masses in the Southern Ocean are part of the
overturning in this region and thus play a major role in global
climate. "While the last Arctic summer was the warmest on record, we
had a cold summer with a sea-ice maximum in the Antarctic. The
expedition shall form the basis for understanding the opposing
developments in the Arctic and in the Antarctic," Fahrbach said.
In the frame of the GEOTRACES project the scientists found the smallest
iron concentrations ever measured in the ocean. As iron is an essential
trace element for algal growth, and algae assimilate CO2 from the air,
the concentration of iron is an important parameter against the
background of the discussion to what extent the oceans may act as a
carbon sink.
As the oceanic changes only become visible after several years and also
differ spatially, the data achieved during the Polarstern expeditions
are not sufficient to discern long-term developments. The data gap can
only be closed with the aid of autonomous observing systems, moored at
the seafloor or drifting freely, that provide oceanic data for several
years. "As a contribution to the Southern Ocean Observation System we
deployed, in international cooperation, 18 moored observing stations,
and we recovered 20. With a total of 65 floating systems that can also
collect data under the sea ice and are active for up to five years we
constructed a unique and extensive measuring network," Fahrbach said.
In order to get the public, and especially the young generation,
interested in science and research and to sensitise them for
environmental processes, two teachers were on board Polarstern. Both
took an active part in research work and communicated their experiences
to pupils, colleagues and the media via internet and telephone. "We
will bring home many impressions from this expedition, and we will be
able to provide a lively picture of the polar regions and their impact
on the whole earth to the pupils," Charlotte Lohse, teacher at the
Heisenberg-Gymnasium in Hamburg, and Stefan Theisen from the Free
Waldorf School in Kiel said.
Notes for Editors: Your contact person is Dr Eberhard Fahrbach (phone
++49-471-4831-1820, email:
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). Your contact
person in the public relations department of the Alfred Wegener
Institute is Dr Susanne Diederich (phone ++49-471-4831-1376, email:
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). Please find printable photos on our website: http://www.awi.de
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