Marine biologist Antje Boetius was a PhD student when she first sailed to the Arctic thirty years ago. The Arctic Ocean's icy, white expanse had left her amazed.
Boetius is now director of the Alfred Wegener Institute in Bremerhaven, Germany's biggest polar research institute. On August 3 this year, she returned to the Arctic aboard the same ship of her first journey-the 42-year-old German icebreaker Polarstern.
It was Polarstern's seventh journey to the North Pole. Aboard the vessel with Boetius this time was a team of 53 scientists, largely PhD students from across the world, and a crew of 44. Boetius was the team's leader and chief scientist.
The team began its two-month journey from Tromso, Norway. Their mission: to study the effects of climate change in the Arctic in September, when the extent of sea ice touches the annual low.
The scientists say there has been a huge change in the polar landscape in the past three decades. Earlier, it was "extremely difficult and challenging" for the Polarstern to break ice and navigate the sea, but this time it was "shockingly very easy". The ice was no longer three to four metres thick; it had thinned out to just one metre. Polarstern could just glide past it.
"It doesn't even break the ice. It just moves through the ice as if it were butter," says Boetius, who returned with her team to Polarstern's home port of Bremerhaven in early October.
The expedition is scientifically significant because the summer of 2023 was the hottest on record since 1880, according to scientists at NASA's Goddard Institute of Space Studies in New York. For Boetius and fellow scientists, the loss of sea ice in the Arctic was expected, but the change in landscape nevertheless came as a shock. "Normally you find thriving topical sea algae, but it was all just wide and empty this time. We were shocked because the area we saw was so huge," says Boetius.
Esta historia es de la edición November 12, 2023 de THE WEEK India.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición November 12, 2023 de THE WEEK India.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
William Dalrymple goes further back
Indian readers have long known William Dalrymple as the chronicler nonpareil of India in the early years of the British raj. His latest book, The Golden Road, is a striking departure, since it takes him to a period from about the third century BC to the 12th-13th centuries CE.
The bleat from the street
What with all the apps delivering straight to one’s doorstep, the supermarkets, the food halls and even the occasional (super-expensive) pop-up thela (cart) offering the woke from field-to-fork option, the good old veggie-market/mandi has fallen off my regular beat.
Courage and conviction
Justice A.M. Ahmadi's biography by his granddaughter brings out behind-the-scenes tension in the Supreme Court as it dealt with the Babri Masjid demolition case
EPIC ENTERPRISE
Gowri Ramnarayan's translation of Ponniyin Selvan brings a fresh perspective to her grandfather's magnum opus
Upgrade your jeans
If you don’t live in the top four-five northern states of India, winter means little else than a pair of jeans. I live in Mumbai, where only mad people wear jeans throughout the year. High temperatures and extreme levels of humidity ensure we go to work in mulmul salwars, cotton pants, or, if you are lucky like me, wear shorts every day.
Garden by the sea
When Kozhikode beach became a fertile ground for ideas with Manorama Hortus
RECRUITERS SPEAK
Industry requirements and selection criteria of management graduates
MORAL COMPASS
The need to infuse ethics into India's MBA landscape
B-SCHOOLS SHOULD UNDERSTAND THAT INDIAN ECONOMY IS GOING TO WITNESS A TREMENDOUS GROWTH
INTERVIEW - Prof DEBASHIS CHATTERJEE, director, Indian Institute of Management, Kozhikode
COURSE CORRECTION
India's best b-schools are navigating tumultuous times. Hurdles include lower salaries offered to their graduates and students misusing AI