Frontier Scientists

Photo by Astronaut Jeff Williams, NASA Earth Observatory

The Frontier Scientists blog is for travelers, teachers, students, aspiring scientists, and anyone interested in scientific discovery in the Alaskan arctic.

Come here for videos, photos and summaries that put you in the front row for breaking scientific news in the Far North. Research by our team of Alaska-based scientists includes 10,000-year-old archeological finds, photos of active Cook Inlet volcanoes taken from the space station, climate change, Denali Park’s grizzlies, the nexus of Russian and native artistic traditions, and more.

Come along as scientists themselves are startled by the unexpected in field locations so remote researchers are often the first modern visitors to set foot in them.

Contact Liz O’Connell at liz@frontierscientists.com

Under pressure: Arctic trends sparking extreme weather at large - 6/12/2013 6:21 am

Tiny aerosol particles, big global impacts - 6/5/2013 1:53 am

BARREL mission balloons fly high - 5/28/2013 8:05 pm

Eyes on Columbia Glacier's retreat - 5/21/2013 7:48 pm

Ozone loss and recovery in the Arctic - 5/14/2013 12:49 pm

Monitoring volcanic activity at Mount Cleveland - 5/8/2013 3:12 am

Big booms over the northland - 4/30/2013 10:24 am

New insights: global warming drivers in the 20th century and beyond - 4/24/2013 6:51 am

"This is not what we expected” said Julie Brigham-Grette in video describing work at Lake El’gygytgyn.

Fairbanks, Alaska, July 10, 2012--- “To this point no one has much of any terrestrial record anywhere in the Arctic older than 125,000 years ago,” said Julie Brigham-Grette, University of Massachusetts Amherst as she describes findings from the Lake El’gygytgyn (or Lake E) project to Office of Polar Programs Board Meeting at the National Science Foundation.

Brigham-Grette along with Martin Melles, University of Cologne Germany and Pavel Minyuk, North-East Interdisciplinary Scientific Research Institute in Magadan, Russia, undertook the core drilling of Lake E, a lake that sits today inside a basin formed by a meteorite that struck the earth 3.6 million years ago. From their findings so far Brigham-Grette confidently said, “This is not a back water lake in the middle of nowhere—it’s actually a lake that is recording a global signal.”

Science magazine published 2.8 Million Years of Arctic Climate Change from Lake El’gygytgyn, NE Russia (Science online 21 June 2012, in print July 13) describing some of the team’s findings. But watch the video JBG Describes Research at Lake E to see and hear the enthusiasm and details as Brigham-Grette describes the findings of this remarkable discovery.

 

Frontier Scientists shares first person accounts and real time insights from leading archaeologists, grizzly bear biologists, volcano researchers, climate change specialists and other scientists.

The research covers many categories:
*Arctic Archaeology
*the Arctic's Amazing Birds
*Climate Change Watch
*Computational Science
*Cook Inlet Volcanoes
*Grizzlies
*Paleo-Eskimo History
*Permafrost
*Petroglyphs
*Alaska's Unmanned Aircraft Research
*Alutiiq Weavers
*Where Is Lake El'Gygytgyn?
*Arctic Winter Cruise

“We want to let travelers, teachers, students, aspiring scientists, and anyone else interested in science feel as if they are with scientists as they track grizzlies or take the temperature of permafrost in a borehole,” explained Liz O’Connell, video director for Frontier Scientists.

Visitors to Frontier Scientists can ask questions direct to our featured scientist. Fascinating video of current scientific discoveries in some of the Arctic’s most remote and dramatic landscapes are chronicled in short videos, Twitter feeds, blogs and web reports. Discover Arctic science at www.FrontierScientists.com.

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