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IPY 2007-2008 |
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Updated
on
05/01/2009
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Full Proposals for IPY 2007-2008 Activities
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| Locations | Coordindates |
|---|---|
| 85 East Volcanic area, Gakkel Ridge | 85N, 85E |
| 8 East Ultra-mafic area, Gakkel Ridge | 85N, 8E |
| Mohns Ridge | 72N, 5E |
2.4 Define the approximate timeframe(s) for proposed field activities?
| Arctic Fieldwork time frame(s) | Antarctic Fieldwork time frame(s) |
|---|---|
| 08/07 - MM/YY | MM/YY - MM/YY |
| 07/07 - MM/YY | MM/YY - MM/YY |
| MM/YY - MM/YY |
2.5 What major logistic support/facilities will be required for
this project?
Icebreaker
Helicopters
Autonomous Underwater Vehicle
Remotely Operated Vehicle
Further details – We require an icebreaker with helicopter support for the Gakkel expedition. We will bring our own autonomous and wireline instrumentation to conduct the surveys and sampling. An icebreaker or suitably ice-strengthened vehicle is also needed for the Mohns Ridge expedition. Here again, we will supply our own ROV for surveys and sampling.
2.6 How will the required logistics be supplied? Have operators been approached?
| Source of logistic support | Likely potential sources | Support agreed |
|---|---|---|
| Consortium of national polar operators |
Y | |
| Own national polar operator | ||
| Another national polar operator | ||
| National agency | Y | |
| Military support | ||
| Commercial operator | ||
| Own support | Y | |
| Other |
2.7 If working in the Arctic regions, has there been contact with local indigenous groups or relevant authorities regarding access?
N/A
3.1 Origin of the activity
This is a new activity developed for the IPY period
3.2 How will the activity be organised and managed? Describe
the proposed management structure and means for coordinating across the
cluster
Our project has a lead PI in each participating country (Reves-Sohn, USA; Pedersen, Norway; Nogi, Japan; Bach, Germany), and these 4 PIs form a de facto executive committee that will organise the field programs and subsequent data analysis. Each field program will individually be managed by the lead PI from the respective host country. The Gakkel vents expedition will be managed by Reves-Sohn, and the Mohns Ridge expedition will be managed by Pedersen, and these lead PIs will work with the executive committee to determine the allocation of ship time and resources by project for each cruise. It is expected that at least one scientist from each participating country will participate on each cruise, but this is not necessary. The over-riding concern is to manage the project so that each cruise will sail with the optimum set of resources (including personnel), and that the data and samples be distributed in such a way as to maximize the scientific return (while preserving intellectual property rights for funded PIs).
3.3 Will the activity leave a legacy of infrastructure and if
so in what form?
We are developing the technology and equipment required to conduct deep-submergence operations, and more specifically operate AUVs, under the pack ice. Some of the equipment we develop will have a general utility in this regard, such that our work will contribute towards the goal of having AUVs available as general purpose tools for polar research.
3.4 Will the activity involve nations other than traditional
polar nations? How will this be addressed?
No.
3.5 Will this activity be linked with other IPY core activities?
If yes please specify
None.
3.6 How will the activity manage its data? Is there a viable
plan and which data management organisations/structures will be involved?
Data acquired during each expedition will be disseminated according to the policies of the respective national funding agencies. In the US, the Gakkel Expedition, which is funded by both NASA and NSF, will follow the more strict data policies of the NSF. The raw data acquired during the expedition will be deposited in the relevant national databanks within 2 years of acquisition. The data acquired from the Mohns Ridge expedition will be deposited in databanks at the University of Bergen.
3.7 Data Policy Agreement
Will this activity sign up to the IPY draft Data Policy (see website)
Yes
3.8 How will the activity contribute to developing the next generation
of polar scientists, logisticians, etc.?
AUVs represent a key technology for the future of oceanographic research in polar regions. A large number of PIs involved with this proposal are early career (pre-tenure) scientists and engineers with a commitment to seeing AUVs become a workhorse technology in the Arctic and Antarctic oceans and seas. Our project will play an important role in pushing this technology envelope, and in providing young scientists with exposure to polar research.
3.9 How will this activity address education, outreach and communication
issues outlined in the Framework document?
The US-led Gakkel expedition has a formal mandate from US NASA to develop a comprehensive education and outreach program for that program. This effort will revolve around the "Dive and Discover" program - a web-based platform for providing near real-time access to ongoing oceanographic research (http://www.divediscover.whoi.edu). The program is targeted at middle-school students (Grades 6-8) and the general public, but it provides multiple layers of information to cover a wide range of educational experience. Educational modules will be developed in coordination with a master science teacher who will reside with the scientists and engineers developing the AUVs at Woods Hole in the summer of 2006. The Gakkel expedition will be advertised through pre-existing networks of grade schools, community colleges, and universities world-wide. A science teacher and a creative non-fiction journalist will accompany the scientists on the Gakkel expedition and will work to development content for our education and outreach program. All of these activities will serve to bring our work and salient results to the general public and to educators at the appropriate levels of detail. In addition, the editors at Scientific American have requested that an article regarding the Gakkel expedition and its analogues with exploration for life on Europa be written for their magazine. It is not yet clear whether this article will be written by some combination of the PIs or by a journalist, but this article will be published PRIOR to the expedition to raise public awareness. Moreover, it is anticipated that discovery on new vent fields and potentially novel life forms under the Arctic ice cap will lead directly to one or more publications in high-profile journals such as Science or Nature, further raising the awareness of both the public and higher-placed decision makers regarding the importance of exploration under the polar ice caps.
The Mohns Ridge expedition will include a teacher at sea program, and discoveries and results will be disseminated to the public through internet pages, newspaper articles and potentially also through a TV-documentary aimed at an international audience.
3.10 What are the proposed sources of funding for this activity?
The US-led Gakkel expedition is already funded by a combination of NSF ($0.5M) and NASA ($3.0M). An additional ~$200K has been raised from private sources for technology development for the project. The Norway-led Mohns expedition is currently being proposed to the Norwegian Research Council. Scientists in Germany and Japan are using the project as leverage to raise funding for individual PIs to either accompany one or both of the expeditions or analyze data or samples in the aftermath.
3.11 Additional Comments
Our consortium includes the following scientists who could not be entered into section 4.2 below:
Dr. Colin Devey, Leibniz-Institut für Meereswissenschaften, Germany
Dr. Robin Keir, Leibniz-Institut für Meereswissenschaften, Germany
Dr. Richard Camilli, Woods Hole Oceanographic Iinstitution, USA
Dr. Albert Bradley, Woods Hole Oceanographic Iinstitution, USA
Dr. Henry Dick, Woods Hole Oceanographic Iinstitution, USA
Dr. Jon Snow, University of Houston, USA
Dr. Ingunn Thorset, University of Bergen, Norway
Dr. Lise Øvreås, University of Bergen, Norway
Dr. Christoffer Schander, University of Bergen, Norway
Dr. Christa Schleper, University of Bergen, Norway
Dr. Nils-Kåre Birkeland, University of Bergen, Norway
Dr. Jan Kosler, University of Bergen, Norway
Dr. Bjarte Hellevang, University of Bergen, Norway
4.1 Contact Details
Lead Contact
Dr Robert Reves-Sohn
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
360 Woods Hole Rd., MS 24
Woods Hole, MA
02540
USA
Tel:
1-508-289-3616
Mobile:
N/A
Fax:
1-508-457-2150
Email:
rsohn@whoi.edu
Second Contact
Dr Rolf Pedersen
University of Bergen
Allegt. 41
Bergen
N-5007
Norway
Tel:
+47 5558 3517
Mobile:
N/A
Fax:
+47 5558 9416
Email:
rolf.pedersen@geo.uib.no
4.2 Other significant consortium members and their affiliation
| Name | Organisation | Country |
|---|---|---|
| Dr. Yoshifumi Nogi | National Institute of Polar Research | Japan |
| Dr. Wolfgang Bach | University of Bremen | Germany |
| Dr. Hanumant Singh | Woods Hole Oceanographic Iinstitution | USA |
| Dr. Susan Humphris | Woods Hole Oceanographic Iinstitution | USA |
| Dr. Timothy Shank | Woods Hole Oceanographic Iinstitution | USA |
| Dr. Jeffrey Seewald | Woods Hole Oceanographic Iinstitution | USA |
| Dr. David Akin | University of Maryland, Space Systems Lab | USA |
| Dr. Ella Atkins | University of Maryland, Space Systems Lab | USA |
| Dr. Craig Carignan | University of Maryland, Space Systems Lab | USA |
| Brian Roberts | University of Maryland, Space Systems Lab | USA |
| Dr. Henrietta Edmonds | University of Texas | USA |
| Dr. Ko-ichi Nakamura | National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology | Japan |
| Dr. Akihiko Yamagishi | Tokyo University of Pharmacy and Life Science | Japan |
| Dr. Vera Schlindwein | Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research | Germany |
| Dr. Wilfried Jokat | Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research | Germany |
| Dr. Elisabeth Helmke | Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research | Germany |
| Dr. Jutta Wollenburg | Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research | Germany |
| Dr. Nicole Dubilier | Max Planck Institute of Marine Microbiology | Germany |
| Dr. Andrea Koschinsky | School of Engineering and Science | Germany |
| Dr. Klas S. Lackschewitz | Leibniz-Institut für Meereswissenschaften | Germany |
| Dr. Sven Petersen | Leibniz-Institut für Meereswissenschaften | Germany |