MOSAiC Monday - August 10, 2020

A Time of Transitions

 

Akademik Tryoshnikov

Right after we reported in last week's MOSAiC Monday that the MOSAiC ice floe was coming to the end of its life cycle, the floe officially broke apart and was no more. Fortunately, most of the research camp infrastructure had all been evacuated from the ice by then. The next task will be to recover the distributed network of instruments that was set up last fall when the expedition first began. Some of these instruments were installed as far as 50 km away from the Polarstern! Then, participants for the final leg will arrive via the Russian research vessel Akademik Tryoshnikov to carry the expedition through its final stretch. 

 

 

Photo: MOSAiC leg 5 participants and crew board the Akademik Tryoshnikov and prepare to begin their journey to the Polarstern. Photo credit: Steffen Graupner/AWI

 

 

Arctic sea ice extent

 

Where is the Ice?

The MOSAiC ice floe breakup comes at a time when the sea ice extent in the Arctic has reached record low levels for this time of year (solid blue line on graph). Scientists are attributing this partly to the record heat wave that hit Siberia in January and lasted into July. Melt ponds are widespread across the Arctic Ocean, a sight that has been familiar to MOSAiC participants on board the Polarstern for the last several weeks. Sea ice is one of the central areas of study of the MOSAiC expedition, and data collected during MOSAiC will provide insight into how Arctic sea ice changes seasonally, and what might happen to it in the future. 

 

Washington Post article: Arctic Sea Ice is in a Downward Spiral

 

 



Opportunity for Indigenous Youth: Video Contest

The Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians (ATNI) is requesting video submissions from all Indigenous youth for the 2021 National Tribal Leadership Climate Change Summit. The ATNI wants to explore the impacts of climate change through the eyes, experiences, and passions of Indigenous youth. Entrants should submit a video relating to indigenous peoples and climate change, while conveying a message of hope. Up to four winners will receive full travel awards ($900 maximum value) and up to four runners-up will receive partial travel awards ($400 maximum value) to attend the in-person Summit in Seattle (May 16-20, 2021).

Learn more, browse examples, and submit a video by September 7, 2020

    


 

 


#askmosaic#askmosaic: A Plethora of Polar Bears

This week's question comes from Corbett from Middleton Middle School: How many polar bears have you seen?

 

Polar bear

During this leg alone, expedition participants have had 19 encounters with polar bears! Although this sounds like a lot, it isn't terribly surprising as the Polarstern has drifted closer and closer to the ice edge where polar bears like to hang out and hunt. Fortunately the MOSAiC safety and logistics team has always made sure both the polar bears and expedition team members are safe and stay far away from one another. Photo credit: Lianna Nixon/CIRES

 

Curious about the Arctic and MOSAiC expedition? Here are three ways you can send us your #askmosaic questions:

1. Submit them

2. Email them: mosaic@colorado.edu with subject line "#askmosaic"

3. Tag us on social media: #askmosaic

 



VSC MOSAiC Virtual Summer Camp

Did you or your kids have summer camp plans that fell through because of COVID? Not to worry! Tune in to MOSAiC Monday each week for a fun, hands-on and engaging virtual summer camp activity related to MOSAiC or the Arctic. All MVSC activities should be done with parent supervision!

 

 

This Week's Activity: Can You Camo?

Arctic fox

Many animals in the Arctic and other ecosystems around the world use camouflage as an adaptation for survival. Some Arctic foxes, for example, actually experience a change in fur color seasonally to match their changing surroundings - white in the winter, gray in the summer.

Your task is to try to camouflage yourself in your current environment. Choose either a room in your home or a space outside - this will serve as your habitat. What colors and textures do you see in your habitat? How might you blend in?

Photo credit: Michael Ginzburg

 

 

What you will need:

  • Pencil and paper
  • Whatever you can find in your closet or home! Suggestions:
    • Clothes from your closet
    • Craft supplies like feathers, construction paper, cardboard, paint, etc.
    • Fabric

 

What to do:

 

  1. Using your pencil and paper, first draw out a couple of ideas for how you will design your camouflage outfit. What kinds of things will you need to consider? What will you make the different components of your outfit out of? Draw some various designs and weigh the pros and cons of each.
  2. Create an outfit that will camouflage you in your habitat. 
  3. Ask someone you live with to assess how well you did - are they able to see you in your habitat? Do they have suggestions for how you can improve your camouflage? 
  4. If improvements to your camouflage can be made, make them and repeat #3 above.

 

Check out our full list of virtual and at-home polar learning resources!

 



Educators' Corner Educators' Corner

The school year is fast approaching, and we're here to help all of you awesome educators with your school year planning! Each week throughout the summer, we'll use Educators' Corner to highlight MOSAiC and Arctic-related lessons, multimedia resources, and other educational materials that you can use in your NGSS (or similar) classroom, in person or remotely. Are you looking for a particular kind of educational resource? Let us know! Email us at mosaic@colorado.edu.


 

 

 

For Your Classroom: Arctic Curricula Series for Middle and High School

 

Arctic and global change graph

Looking for new and compelling ways to teach about the nature of science and climate change in your classroom? Look no further! We've developed two units connected to the NGSS Nature of Science concepts and Earth Systems standards about the MOSAiC expedition and Arctic climate. In the Exploring the New & Old Arctic unit, students will compare and contrast past (Fram) and present (MOSAiC) Arctic expeditions, to prepare for the future. The unit is developed around the driving question, “How have scientific questions, methods, technologies, and our knowledge of the Arctic changed over time?.” In the second unit, Arctic Feedbacks: Not all Warming is Equal, students explore parts of the Arctic climate system to understand why the Arctic might be warming twice as fast as the rest of the world, a phenomena known as Arctic amplification. 

These two units can be used in their entirety, or select lessons can be pulled from the units and plugged in to your existing curriculum. 

 

Go to the Exploring the New & Old Arctic curriculum (appropriate for grades 6-12)

Go to the Arctic Feedbacks Curriculum (appropriate for grades 9-12)

 



10-minute clock icon MOSAiC Weekly Tracking

Plot the Polarstern

Each week we will provide you with the latitude and longitude coordinates of the Polarstern so that you can track its journey across the Arctic.

Download the map to plot coordinates

Download a larger map of the Arctic for a bigger picture view of the expedition area

Location of the Polarstern
 Date  Latitude  Longitude
 September 16, 2019  69.68 N  18.99 E
 September 23, 2019  72.31 N  26.93 E
 September 30, 2019  85.12 N  138.05 E
 October 4, 2019**  85.08 N  134.43 E
 October 7, 2019  85.10 N  133.82 E
 October 14, 2019  84.85 N  135.03 E
 October 21, 2019  84.97 N  132.73 E
 October 28, 2019  85.47 N  127.07 E
 November 4, 2019  85.88 N  121.70 E
 November 11, 2019  85.82 N  116.00 E
 November 18, 2019  86.05 N  122.43 E
 November 25, 2019  85.85 N  121.35 E
 December 2, 2019  85.97 N  112.95 E
 December 9, 2019  86.25 N  121.40 E
 December 16, 2019  86.62 N  118.12 E
 December 23, 2019  86.63 N  113.20 E
 December 30, 2019  86.58 N  117.13 E
 January 6, 2020  87.10 N  115.10 E
 January 13, 2020  87.35 N  106.63 E
 January 20, 2020  87.42 N  97.77 E
 January 27, 2020  87.43 N  95.82 E
 February 3, 2020  87.42 N  93.65 E
 February 10, 2020  87.78 N  91.52 E
 February 17, 2020  88.07 N  78.52 E
 February 24, 2020  88.58 N  52.87 E
 March 2, 2020  88.17 N  31.02 E
 March 9, 2020  87.93 N  24.20 E
 March 16, 2020  86.87 N  12.70 E
 March 23, 2020  86.20 N  15.78 E
 March 30, 2020  85.37 N  13.27 E
 April 6, 2020  84.52 N  14.38 E
 April 13, 2020  84.28 N  14.97 E
 April 20, 2020  84.52 N  14.57 E
 April 27, 2020  83.93 N  15.65 E
 May 4, 2020  83.92 N  18.03 E
 May 11, 2020  83.47 N  13.08 E
 May 18+, 2020  83.32 N  8.68 E
 May 25+, 2020  82.43 N  8.28 E
 June 1+, 2020  81.33 N  9.93 E
 June 8+, 2020  78.10 N  12.73 E
 June 15+, 2020  82.20 N  8.18 E
 June 22, 2020  81.95 N  9.27 E
 June 29, 2020  82.03 N  9.88 E
 July 6, 2020  81.67 N  5.22 E
 July 13, 2020  81.40 N  0.28 E
 July 20, 2020  80.78 N  0.42 W
 July 27, 2020  79.55 N  2.37 W
 August 3, 2020  78.60 N  4.37 W
 August 10, 2020  79.90 N  5.52 W

 **Day when MOSAiC reached the ice floe that the Polarstern will become frozen in and drift with for the next year.
+ Indicates when the Polarstern traveled under its own engine power (no drifting)

Log MOSAiC Data 

What happens in the Arctic as the seasons change? Find out firsthand with real-time Arctic data, provided for you here each week. 

Keep track of Arctic conditions over the course of the expedition:

Download Data Logbook for Sept. 2019 - Dec. 2019

Download Data Logbook for Dec. 2019 - Mar. 2020

Download Data Logbook for Mar. 2020 - June 2020

Download Data Logbook for July 2020 - Oct. 2020

 Date  Length of day (hrs)  Air temperature (deg C) at location of Polarstern  Arctic Sea Ice Extent (million km2)
 September 16, 2019  13.25  High: 10   Low: 4.4  3.9
 September 23, 2019  12.35  High: 6     Low: -1  4.1
 September 30, 2019  9.1  -4.7  4.4
 October 4, 2019**  6.27  -13.0  4.5
 October 7, 2019  3.05  -8.2  4.6
 October 14, 2019  0  -14.7  4.8
 October 21, 2019  0  -12.8  5.4
 October 28, 2019  0  -18.3  6.8
 November 4, 2019  0  -18.9  8.0
 November 11, 2019  0  -25.5  8.7
 November 18, 2019  0  -10.7  9.3
 November 25, 2019  0  -18.4  10.0
 December 2, 2019  0  -26.6  10.4
 December 9, 2019  0  -23.1  11.2
 December 16, 2019  0  -19.2  11.8
 December 23, 2019  0  -26.9   12.2
 December 30, 2019  0  -26.4   12.6
 January 6, 2020  0  -28.0  13.0
 January 13, 2020  0  -30.7  13.1
 January 20, 2020  0  -27.1  13.6
 January 27, 2020  0  -22.5  13.8
 February 3, 2020  0  -28.8  14.1
 February 10, 2020  0  -26.2  14.5
 February 17, 2020  0  -31.9  14.4
 February 24, 2020  0  -24.0  14.6
 March 2, 2020  0  -35.5  14.8
 March 9, 2020  0  -37.9  14.7
 March 16, 2020  10.5  -27.5  14.7
 March 23, 2020  16.5  -28.7  14.4
 March 30, 2020  24  -28.6  14.0
 April 6, 2020  24  -18.2  13.7
 April 13, 2020  24  -25.8  13.6
 April 20, 2020  24  -10.2  13.3
 April 27, 2020  24  -11.7  12.8
 May 4, 2020  24  -16.2  12.8
 May 11, 2020  24  -10.4  12.4
 May 18, 2020  24  -5.1  11.7
 May 25, 2020  24  0.4  11.5
 June 1, 2020  24  0.0  11.1
 June 8+, 2020  24  -0.1  10.6
 June 15+, 2020  24  -0.4  10.1
 June 22, 2020  24  -0.4  9.6
 June 29, 2020  24  0.5  9.2
 July 6, 2020  24  0.6  8.2
 July 13, 2020  24  0.2  7.2
 July 20, 2020  24  -0.1  6.2
 July 27, 2020  24  1.9  5.8
 August 3, 2020  24  1.2  5.5
 August 10, 2020  24  0.9  5.1

*Note: We expect data to fall within the following ranges: Length of day, 0-24 hours; Temperature, -40 to 14 degrees C; Sea ice extent, 3-15 million km2

**Day when MOSAiC reached the ice floe that the Polarstern will become frozen in and drift with for the next year.


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Email us! mosaic@colorado.edu


Next Week
  • Final week of the MOSAiC Virtual Summer Camp!
  • Check in with the Polarstern