Monday, November 4, 2013

WCRP 18/10-1 Where Do We Go From Here Discussion

Where Do We Go From Here Discussion
- Greg Flato, CliC Chair, Environment Canada

Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway.
18/10 indicates the date, the 18th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.
Workshop webpage climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013

http://pdl.vimeocdn.com/74936/939/202267645.mp4?token=1383575482_a9aa1779680f7d2683f154e24aef08ef

WCRP 18/10-3 Summary of Plan and Strategy: A Way Forward: Permafrost/Carbon

Summary of Plan and Strategy: Breakout Groups: Permafrost/Carbon
Breakout groups based on previous days
Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway.
18/10 indicates the date, the 18th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.
Workshop webpage climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013

http://pdl.vimeocdn.com/27541/101/202261030.mp4?token=1383577035_e2fc9e749e6230d915c178f24cbd69c0

WCRP 18/10-2 Summary of Plan and Strategy: A Way Forward: Glaciers and Ice caps

Summary of Plan and Strategy: Breakout Groups: Glaciers and Ice caps
Breakout groups based on previous days
Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway.
18/10 indicates the date, the 18th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.
Workshop webpage climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013

http://pdl.vimeocdn.com/81434/814/202263296.mp4?token=1383577068_44926a37a6f017967f0921670cee9789

FrostByte H. Matthes: Evaluation of present-day regional climate simulations over the Arctic

Frostbyte by Heidrun Matthes for the International Conference on Regional Climate - CORDEX 2013
4 – 7 November 2013 Brussels, Belgium
http://cordex2013.wcrp-climate.org/


http://pdl.vimeocdn.com/33588/852/202256312.mp4?token=1383571166_d33b1861272705092fa1cb62766c6b62

Friday, October 25, 2013

WCRP 17/10-7 Concrete Action Plan Breakout Groups: Sea Ice

Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway. 
17/10 indicates the date, the 17th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.


Workshop webpage http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013

WCRP 17/10-6 Concrete Action Plan Breakout Groups: Permafrost Carbon

Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway. 
17/10 indicates the date, the 17th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.


Workshop webpage http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013

WCRP 17/10-5 Concrete Action Plan Breakout Groups: Glacier & Ice Caps

Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway. 
17/10 indicates the date, the 17th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.


Workshop webpage http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013


http://pdl.vimeocdn.com/48827/307/199998614.mp4?token=1382734068_e0f1f12e49d6e35d2831ff1fe6d5b7d8

WCRP 17/10-4 Breakout Group Reports and Discussion: Snow

Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway. 
17/10 indicates the date, the 17th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.

Workshop webpage http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013


WCRP 17/10-3 Breakout Group Reports and Discussion: Permafrost


Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway. 
17/10 indicates the date, the 17th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.

Workshop webpage http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013

http://pdl.vimeocdn.com/00912/414/199771237.mp4?token=1382723341_0e7b6b2c81bc1fc52837fec2522eac3a

WCRP 17/10-2 Breakout Group Reports and Discussion: Sea Ice

Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway. 
17/10 indicates the date, the 17th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.

Workshop webpage http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013


WCRP 17/10-1 G. Flato Now What - Where Do We Go From Here?

Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway. 
17/10 indicates the date, the 17th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.

Workshop webpage http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013


WCRP 16/10-8 Breakout Group Reports and Discussion: The Other Green Group

Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway. 
16/10 indicates the date, the 16th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.

Workshop webpage http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013


WCRP 16/10-7 Breakout Group Reports and Discussion: Green Group

Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway. 
16/10 indicates the date, the 16th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.

Workshop webpage http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013


WCRP 16/10-6 G. Krinner: Cryosphere Biases/Shortcomings in Earth System Models

Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway. 
16/10 indicates the date, the 16th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.

Workshop webpage http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013


WCRP 16/10-5 T.Schuur: Permafrost and Carbon in a Changing Climate

Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway. 
16/10 indicates the date, the 16th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.

Workshop webpage http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013


WCRP 16/10-4 D. Notz: Sea Ice in a Changing Climate

Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway. 
16/10 indicates the date, the 16th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.

Workshop webpage http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013


WCRP 16/10-3 A Shepherd: Ice Sheets and Glaciers in a Changing Climate

Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway. 
16/10 indicates the date, the 16th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.

Workshop webpage http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013


WCRP 16/10-2 M.Raphael: Polar Climate Predictability Initiative

Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway. 
16/10 indicates the date, the 16th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs.


Workshop webpage http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013

WCRP 16/10-1 G. Flato: WCRP Grand Challenges and the Cryosphere in a Changing Climate

Recorded during for the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) workshop 16-18 October 2013, Tromsø, Norway. 
16/10 indicates the date, the 16th of October and the subsequent number indicates where in the chronological order it belongs


Workshop webpage http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/meetings/wcrp-cryo-gc-2013

Monday, September 16, 2013

H Conway - Morphology and distribution of ice rises in the Ross Sea sector; evidence for past, present and future behaviors of the region

A presentation at Antarctic Ice Rises 2013 workshop
26th to 29th of August, Tromsø, Norway
http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/albums/ice-rises-2013

Editing and recording
Erik Warming and Chris Borstad

https://vimeo.com/74580366

J Brown - Measuring the trees to see the forest bridging the gaps through synthesis of core and radar data

A presentation at Antarctic Ice Rises 2013 workshop
26th to 29th of August, Tromsø, Norway
http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/albums/ice-rises-2013

Editing and recording
Erik Warming and Chris Borstad

https://vimeo.com/74580368

J Lenaerts - Accumulation around ice rises a study with a high-resolution regional atmospheric climate model

A presentation at Antarctic Ice Rises 2013 workshop
26th to 29th of August, Tromsø, Norway
http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/albums/ice-rises-2013

Editing and recording
Erik Warming and Chris Borstad


https://vimeo.com/74580369

M Bentley - Geology and glacial geology of Antarctic Ice Rises

A presentation at Antarctic Ice Rises 2013 workshop
26th to 29th of August, Tromsø, Norway
http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/albums/ice-rises-2013

Editing and recording
Erik Warming and Chris Borstad

https://vimeo.com/74581085

K Nicholls - Controls on ice shelf basal mass balance and consequences for ice shelf properties

A presentation at Antarctic Ice Rises 2013 workshop
26th to 29th of August, Tromsø, Norway
http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/albums/ice-rises-2013

Editing and recording
Erik Warming and Chris Borstad

https://vimeo.com/74581086

R Mulvaney - Ice cores through ice rises what might they reveal about ice rise evolution

A presentation at Antarctic Ice Rises 2013 workshop
26th to 29th of August, Tromsø, Norway
http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/albums/ice-rises-2013

Editing and recording
Erik Warming and Chris Borstad


https://vimeo.com/74582207

P Whitehouse - Ice Rises an untapped resource for studies of postglacial rebound

A presentation at Antarctic Ice Rises 2013 workshop
26th to 29th of August, Tromsø, Norway
http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/albums/ice-rises-2013

Editing and recording
Erik Warming and Chris Borstad

https://vimeo.com/74582208

N Ross - Surface, structure and substrate of the Bungenstock Ice Rise and adjacent ice streams, West Antarctica implications for

A presentation at Antarctic Ice Rises 2013 workshop
26th to 29th of August, Tromsø, Norway
http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/albums/ice-rises-2013

Editing and recording
Erik Warming and Chris Borstad

https://vimeo.com/74582210

Sunday, September 15, 2013

G Durand - On the impact of ice rises onto grounding line dynamics – preliminary results on Pine Island Glacier

A presentation at Antarctic Ice Rises 2013 workshop
26th to 29th of August, Tromsø, Norway
http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/albums/ice-rises-2013

Editing and recording
Erik Warming and Chris Borstad

https://vimeo.com/74572603

F Pattyn - Ice Rises ice sheet and shelf dynamics in a nutshell

A presentation at Antarctic Ice Rises 2013 workshop
26th to 29th of August, Tromsø, Norway
http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/albums/ice-rises-2013

Editing and recording
Erik Warming and Chris Borstad


https://vimeo.com/74572602

D Goldberg - Ungrounding of an ice rise due to submarine ice shelf melting a coupled model study

A presentation at Antarctic Ice Rises 2013 workshop
26th to 29th of August, Tromsø, Norway
http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/albums/ice-rises-2013

Editing and recording
Erik Warming and Chris Borstad

https://vimeo.com/74572601

C Martin - Effects of ice-flow dynamics at domes and divides on the age-depth distribution

A presentation at Antarctic Ice Rises 2013 workshop
26th to 29th of August, Tromsø, Norway
http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/albums/ice-rises-2013

Editing and recording
Erik Warming and Chris Borstad

https://vimeo.com/74572598

APECS Session 2 - Outreach activities for the general public, science communication and interaction with policy makers

A presentation at Antarctic Ice Rises 2013 workshop
26th to 29th of August, Tromsø, Norway
http://www.climate-cryosphere.org/albums/ice-rises-2013

Editing and recording
Erik Warming and Chris Borstad

https://vimeo.com/74572597

Saturday, April 20, 2013

A straw-man observing system


by Olaf Boebel during 

Southern Ocean observing System Seeing Below the Ice Workshop 

Video recording provided by SOOS, CSIRO (Hobart)
Video editing by Molly Zhongnan Jia.
------ 

https://ia601701.us.archive.org/31/items/SOOS6Boebel/SOOS-6Boebel%20.m4v  

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The Southern Ocean Observing System (SOOS), an international program hosted and sponsored by the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) at the University of Tasmania, led the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop, which was sponsored by CSIRO ‘Wealth from Oceans Flagship’, the Climate and Cryosphere (CliC) project of the World Climate Research Programme, and the Partnership for Observations of the Global Ocean (POGO).

More than 50 international scientists attended the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop (22-25 October 2012, Hobart, Australia) to develop a strategy to observe ocean structure and circulation and ice-ocean interactions in the Antarctic sea ice zone.

Climate signals indicate that the Antarctic sea ice zone is undergoing rapid and accelerating changes where warming ocean meets both the sea-ice and ice shelves. These changes have far-reaching effects through their impact on global sea-level rise and warming rates, yet oceans below the ice are amongst the least understood and most poorly monitored systems in the world.

The four-day workshop gave scientists the opportunity to present the current status of polar observing systems in both hemispheres, discuss key questions, define problems and recommend the solutions required to develop a sustained strategy for observations in the Southern Ocean sea-ice zone. A 10-year plan will now be developed to outline the measurements needed, how to collect them and from where, in the sea ice zone to study ocean - ice interactions.

Guest speakers at the workshop came from over 20 countries and included Professor Walter Munk, physical oceanographer, whose pioneering research more than 50 years ago demonstrated the relationship between winds and ocean circulation. Professor Munk also celebrated his 95th birthday in Hobart.

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Session 4-National activities and international programmes not covered in previous talks


by  SangHoon Lee, Alexander Klepikov, Adrian Jenkins, Mike Williams, Steve Piotrowicz, and Stefan Vogel


(Stefan Vogel's talk is not included in this video due to technique issue, but the powerpoint is available from SOOS)

Talks were presented during Southern Ocean observing System Seeing Below the Ice Workshop 

Video recording provided by SOOS, CSIRO (Hobart)
Video editing by Molly Zhongnan Jia.
------ 

 https://ia601701.us.archive.org/30/items/SOOSSession4Real/SOOS-Session%204%20real.m4v

------ 

The Southern Ocean Observing System (SOOS), an international program hosted and sponsored by the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) at the University of Tasmania, led the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop, which was sponsored by CSIRO ‘Wealth from Oceans Flagship’, the Climate and Cryosphere (CliC) project of the World Climate Research Programme, and the Partnership for Observations of the Global Ocean (POGO).

More than 50 international scientists attended the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop (22-25 October 2012, Hobart, Australia) to develop a strategy to observe ocean structure and circulation and ice-ocean interactions in the Antarctic sea ice zone.

Climate signals indicate that the Antarctic sea ice zone is undergoing rapid and accelerating changes where warming ocean meets both the sea-ice and ice shelves. These changes have far-reaching effects through their impact on global sea-level rise and warming rates, yet oceans below the ice are amongst the least understood and most poorly monitored systems in the world.

The four-day workshop gave scientists the opportunity to present the current status of polar observing systems in both hemispheres, discuss key questions, define problems and recommend the solutions required to develop a sustained strategy for observations in the Southern Ocean sea-ice zone. A 10-year plan will now be developed to outline the measurements needed, how to collect them and from where, in the sea ice zone to study ocean - ice interactions.

Guest speakers at the workshop came from over 20 countries and included Professor Walter Munk, physical oceanographer, whose pioneering research more than 50 years ago demonstrated the relationship between winds and ocean circulation. Professor Munk also celebrated his 95th birthday in Hobart.

------



Role of isotopes and tracer measurements


by Karen Heywood during 

Southern Ocean observing System Seeing Below the Ice Workshop 

Video recording provided by SOOS, CSIRO (Hobart)
Video editing by Molly Zhongnan Jia.
------ 

https://ia601703.us.archive.org/15/items/SOOSDay214Heywood/SOOS-Day2-14Heywood.m4v  

------ 

The Southern Ocean Observing System (SOOS), an international program hosted and sponsored by the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) at the University of Tasmania, led the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop, which was sponsored by CSIRO ‘Wealth from Oceans Flagship’, the Climate and Cryosphere (CliC) project of the World Climate Research Programme, and the Partnership for Observations of the Global Ocean (POGO).

More than 50 international scientists attended the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop (22-25 October 2012, Hobart, Australia) to develop a strategy to observe ocean structure and circulation and ice-ocean interactions in the Antarctic sea ice zone.

Climate signals indicate that the Antarctic sea ice zone is undergoing rapid and accelerating changes where warming ocean meets both the sea-ice and ice shelves. These changes have far-reaching effects through their impact on global sea-level rise and warming rates, yet oceans below the ice are amongst the least understood and most poorly monitored systems in the world.

The four-day workshop gave scientists the opportunity to present the current status of polar observing systems in both hemispheres, discuss key questions, define problems and recommend the solutions required to develop a sustained strategy for observations in the Southern Ocean sea-ice zone. A 10-year plan will now be developed to outline the measurements needed, how to collect them and from where, in the sea ice zone to study ocean - ice interactions.

Guest speakers at the workshop came from over 20 countries and included Professor Walter Munk, physical oceanographer, whose pioneering research more than 50 years ago demonstrated the relationship between winds and ocean circulation. Professor Munk also celebrated his 95th birthday in Hobart.

------ 



Role of AUV's in measuring under sea ice and ice shelves


by Adrian Jenkins during 


Southern Ocean observing System Seeing Below the Ice Workshop 

Video recording provided by SOOS, CSIRO (Hobart)
Video editing by Molly Zhongnan Jia.
------ 

https://ia601700.us.archive.org/10/items/SOOSDay213Jenkins/SOOS-Day2-13Jenkins.m4v  

------

The Southern Ocean Observing System (SOOS), an international program hosted and sponsored by the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) at the University of Tasmania, led the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop, which was sponsored by CSIRO ‘Wealth from Oceans Flagship’, the Climate and Cryosphere (CliC) project of the World Climate Research Programme, and the Partnership for Observations of the Global Ocean (POGO).


More than 50 international scientists attended the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop (22-25 October 2012, Hobart, Australia) to develop a strategy to observe ocean structure and circulation and ice-ocean interactions in the Antarctic sea ice zone.


Climate signals indicate that the Antarctic sea ice zone is undergoing rapid and accelerating changes where warming ocean meets both the sea-ice and ice shelves. These changes have far-reaching effects through their impact on global sea-level rise and warming rates, yet oceans below the ice are amongst the least understood and most poorly monitored systems in the world.


The four-day workshop gave scientists the opportunity to present the current status of polar observing systems in both hemispheres, discuss key questions, define problems and recommend the solutions required to develop a sustained strategy for observations in the Southern Ocean sea-ice zone. A 10-year plan will now be developed to outline the measurements needed, how to collect them and from where, in the sea ice zone to study ocean - ice interactions.


Guest speakers at the workshop came from over 20 countries and included Professor Walter Munk, physical oceanographer, whose pioneering research more than 50 years ago demonstrated the relationship between winds and ocean circulation. Professor Munk also celebrated his 95th birthday in Hobart.

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Tethered ROV's under ice

by Andy Bowen during 


Southern Ocean observing System Seeing Below the Ice Workshop 

Video recording provided by SOOS, CSIRO (Hobart)
Video editing by Molly Zhongnan Jia.
------ 

https://ia601702.us.archive.org/7/items/SOOSDay212Bowen/SOOS-Day2-12Bowen.m4v  

------

The Southern Ocean Observing System (SOOS), an international program hosted and sponsored by the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) at the University of Tasmania, led the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop, which was sponsored by CSIRO ‘Wealth from Oceans Flagship’, the Climate and Cryosphere (CliC) project of the World Climate Research Programme, and the Partnership for Observations of the Global Ocean (POGO).


More than 50 international scientists attended the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop (22-25 October 2012, Hobart, Australia) to develop a strategy to observe ocean structure and circulation and ice-ocean interactions in the Antarctic sea ice zone.


Climate signals indicate that the Antarctic sea ice zone is undergoing rapid and accelerating changes where warming ocean meets both the sea-ice and ice shelves. These changes have far-reaching effects through their impact on global sea-level rise and warming rates, yet oceans below the ice are amongst the least understood and most poorly monitored systems in the world.


The four-day workshop gave scientists the opportunity to present the current status of polar observing systems in both hemispheres, discuss key questions, define problems and recommend the solutions required to develop a sustained strategy for observations in the Southern Ocean sea-ice zone. A 10-year plan will now be developed to outline the measurements needed, how to collect them and from where, in the sea ice zone to study ocean - ice interactions.


Guest speakers at the workshop came from over 20 countries and included Professor Walter Munk, physical oceanographer, whose pioneering research more than 50 years ago demonstrated the relationship between winds and ocean circulation. Professor Munk also celebrated his 95th birthday in Hobart.

------



Acoustic tomography

by Matthew Dzieciuch during 


Southern Ocean observing System Seeing Below the Ice Workshop 

Video recording provided by SOOS, CSIRO (Hobart)
Video editing by Molly Zhongnan Jia.
------ 

https://ia601701.us.archive.org/1/items/SOOSDay211Diz/SOOS-Day2-11Diz.m4v  

------ 

The Southern Ocean Observing System (SOOS), an international program hosted and sponsored by the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) at the University of Tasmania, led the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop, which was sponsored by CSIRO ‘Wealth from Oceans Flagship’, the Climate and Cryosphere (CliC) project of the World Climate Research Programme, and the Partnership for Observations of the Global Ocean (POGO).


More than 50 international scientists attended the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop (22-25 October 2012, Hobart, Australia) to develop a strategy to observe ocean structure and circulation and ice-ocean interactions in the Antarctic sea ice zone.


Climate signals indicate that the Antarctic sea ice zone is undergoing rapid and accelerating changes where warming ocean meets both the sea-ice and ice shelves. These changes have far-reaching effects through their impact on global sea-level rise and warming rates, yet oceans below the ice are amongst the least understood and most poorly monitored systems in the world.


The four-day workshop gave scientists the opportunity to present the current status of polar observing systems in both hemispheres, discuss key questions, define problems and recommend the solutions required to develop a sustained strategy for observations in the Southern Ocean sea-ice zone. A 10-year plan will now be developed to outline the measurements needed, how to collect them and from where, in the sea ice zone to study ocean - ice interactions.


Guest speakers at the workshop came from over 20 countries and included Professor Walter Munk, physical oceanographer, whose pioneering research more than 50 years ago demonstrated the relationship between winds and ocean circulation. Professor Munk also celebrated his 95th birthday in Hobart.

------



Acoustic probing of the ocean wedge under an ice sheet

by Walter Munk during 


Southern Ocean observing System Seeing Below the Ice Workshop 

Video recording provided by SOOS, CSIRO (Hobart)
Video editing by Molly Zhongnan Jia.
------ 

https://ia601701.us.archive.org/21/items/SOOSDay210Munk/SOOS-Day2-10Munk%20.m4v  

------ 

The Southern Ocean Observing System (SOOS), an international program hosted and sponsored by the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) at the University of Tasmania, led the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop, which was sponsored by CSIRO ‘Wealth from Oceans Flagship’, the Climate and Cryosphere (CliC) project of the World Climate Research Programme, and the Partnership for Observations of the Global Ocean (POGO).


More than 50 international scientists attended the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop (22-25 October 2012, Hobart, Australia) to develop a strategy to observe ocean structure and circulation and ice-ocean interactions in the Antarctic sea ice zone.


Climate signals indicate that the Antarctic sea ice zone is undergoing rapid and accelerating changes where warming ocean meets both the sea-ice and ice shelves. These changes have far-reaching effects through their impact on global sea-level rise and warming rates, yet oceans below the ice are amongst the least understood and most poorly monitored systems in the world.


The four-day workshop gave scientists the opportunity to present the current status of polar observing systems in both hemispheres, discuss key questions, define problems and recommend the solutions required to develop a sustained strategy for observations in the Southern Ocean sea-ice zone. A 10-year plan will now be developed to outline the measurements needed, how to collect them and from where, in the sea ice zone to study ocean - ice interactions.


Guest speakers at the workshop came from over 20 countries and included Professor Walter Munk, physical oceanographer, whose pioneering research more than 50 years ago demonstrated the relationship between winds and ocean circulation. Professor Munk also celebrated his 95th birthday in Hobart.

------ 



Combining Argo and seal data

by Lars Boehme during 


Southern Ocean observing System Seeing Below the Ice Workshop 

Video recording provided by SOOS, CSIRO (Hobart)
Video editing by Molly Zhongnan Jia.
------ 

https://ia601700.us.archive.org/35/items/SOOSDay29Boehme/SOOS-Day2-9Boehme.m4v  

------ 

The Southern Ocean Observing System (SOOS), an international program hosted and sponsored by the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) at the University of Tasmania, led the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop, which was sponsored by CSIRO ‘Wealth from Oceans Flagship’, the Climate and Cryosphere (CliC) project of the World Climate Research Programme, and the Partnership for Observations of the Global Ocean (POGO).


More than 50 international scientists attended the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop (22-25 October 2012, Hobart, Australia) to develop a strategy to observe ocean structure and circulation and ice-ocean interactions in the Antarctic sea ice zone.


Climate signals indicate that the Antarctic sea ice zone is undergoing rapid and accelerating changes where warming ocean meets both the sea-ice and ice shelves. These changes have far-reaching effects through their impact on global sea-level rise and warming rates, yet oceans below the ice are amongst the least understood and most poorly monitored systems in the world.


The four-day workshop gave scientists the opportunity to present the current status of polar observing systems in both hemispheres, discuss key questions, define problems and recommend the solutions required to develop a sustained strategy for observations in the Southern Ocean sea-ice zone. A 10-year plan will now be developed to outline the measurements needed, how to collect them and from where, in the sea ice zone to study ocean - ice interactions.


Guest speakers at the workshop came from over 20 countries and included Professor Walter Munk, physical oceanographer, whose pioneering research more than 50 years ago demonstrated the relationship between winds and ocean circulation. Professor Munk also celebrated his 95th birthday in Hobart.

------ 



Using tagged animals to measure the ocean under sea ice

by Mark Hindell during 


Southern Ocean observing System Seeing Below the Ice Workshop 

Video recording provided by SOOS, CSIRO (Hobart)
Video editing by Molly Zhongnan Jia.
------ 

https://ia601703.us.archive.org/25/items/SOOSDay28Hindell/SOOS-Day2-8Hindell.m4v  

------ 

The Southern Ocean Observing System (SOOS), an international program hosted and sponsored by the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) at the University of Tasmania, led the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop, which was sponsored by CSIRO ‘Wealth from Oceans Flagship’, the Climate and Cryosphere (CliC) project of the World Climate Research Programme, and the Partnership for Observations of the Global Ocean (POGO).


More than 50 international scientists attended the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop (22-25 October 2012, Hobart, Australia) to develop a strategy to observe ocean structure and circulation and ice-ocean interactions in the Antarctic sea ice zone.


Climate signals indicate that the Antarctic sea ice zone is undergoing rapid and accelerating changes where warming ocean meets both the sea-ice and ice shelves. These changes have far-reaching effects through their impact on global sea-level rise and warming rates, yet oceans below the ice are amongst the least understood and most poorly monitored systems in the world.


The four-day workshop gave scientists the opportunity to present the current status of polar observing systems in both hemispheres, discuss key questions, define problems and recommend the solutions required to develop a sustained strategy for observations in the Southern Ocean sea-ice zone. A 10-year plan will now be developed to outline the measurements needed, how to collect them and from where, in the sea ice zone to study ocean - ice interactions.


Guest speakers at the workshop came from over 20 countries and included Professor Walter Munk, physical oceanographer, whose pioneering research more than 50 years ago demonstrated the relationship between winds and ocean circulation. Professor Munk also celebrated his 95th birthday in Hobart.

------



Argo plans

by Steve Piotrowicz during 

Southern Ocean observing System Seeing Below the Ice Workshop 

Video recording provided by SOOS, CSIRO (Hobart)
Video editing by Molly Zhongnan Jia.
------ 

https://ia601704.us.archive.org/15/items/SOOSDay27Piotrowicz/SOOS-Day2-7Piotrowicz.m4v  

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The Southern Ocean Observing System (SOOS), an international program hosted and sponsored by the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) at the University of Tasmania, led the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop, which was sponsored by CSIRO ‘Wealth from Oceans Flagship’, the Climate and Cryosphere (CliC) project of the World Climate Research Programme, and the Partnership for Observations of the Global Ocean (POGO).


More than 50 international scientists attended the Seeing Below the Ice Workshop (22-25 October 2012, Hobart, Australia) to develop a strategy to observe ocean structure and circulation and ice-ocean interactions in the Antarctic sea ice zone.


Climate signals indicate that the Antarctic sea ice zone is undergoing rapid and accelerating changes where warming ocean meets both the sea-ice and ice shelves. These changes have far-reaching effects through their impact on global sea-level rise and warming rates, yet oceans below the ice are amongst the least understood and most poorly monitored systems in the world.


The four-day workshop gave scientists the opportunity to present the current status of polar observing systems in both hemispheres, discuss key questions, define problems and recommend the solutions required to develop a sustained strategy for observations in the Southern Ocean sea-ice zone. A 10-year plan will now be developed to outline the measurements needed, how to collect them and from where, in the sea ice zone to study ocean - ice interactions.


Guest speakers at the workshop came from over 20 countries and included Professor Walter Munk, physical oceanographer, whose pioneering research more than 50 years ago demonstrated the relationship between winds and ocean circulation. Professor Munk also celebrated his 95th birthday in Hobart.

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