Archive of News and Press Releases

Sound velocity profiler for bathymetry patch test
Weekly report

Some final tests and a sunny goodbye

Final device tests, packing equipment, interesting weather patterns and a BBQ were all part of activities this week before reaching Las Palmas. 
[Translate to English:] Leben am Meeresboden
Online news

Abundance of life discovered beneath an Antarctic ice shelf

Far beneath the ice shelves of the Antarctic, there is more marine life than expected, finds a recent study in the journal Current Biology, published this week (20 December 2021). Despite occupying nearly 1.6 million km2, ice shelves are amongst the least known environments on Earth. Life has been seen in these perpetual dark, cold and still habitats on camera but has rarely been collected. 
Polarstern-Expedition ARK-XXVII/1
Press releases

Meltwater influences ecosystems in the Arctic Ocean

In the summer months, sea ice from the Arctic drifts through Fram Strait into the Atlantic. Thanks to meltwater, a stable layer forms around the drifting ice atop the more salty seawater, producing significant effects on biological processes and marine organisms. In turn, this has an effect on when carbon from the atmosphere is absorbed and stored, as a team of researchers led by the Alfred Wegener Institute has now determined with the aid of the FRAM ocean observation system. Their findings have just been published in the journal Nature Communications.
Online news

Drilling into Antarctica’s past to see our future

Can meeting CO2 emission targets and thus limiting global warming prevent Antarctic ice from melting catastrophically? An international research team is preparing to drill into the sediment of the seabed deep beneath Antarctica's Ross Ice Shelf to find out.
Weekly report

A stormy send-off

After a snowy Bremerhaven departure on Dec 5th 2021 at 13:00, Polarstern made its way through the port, the locks and towards the English Channel.
Antje Boetius
Short news

Quick, save the climate – but how?

For its 50th anniversary, the University of Bremen is organizing an online talk series to discuss how the university can help shape the major issues of our time. The next talk will take place on December 14 from 6:00 to 7:30 p.m. under the title "Quick, save the climate – but how?", with AWI Director Antje Boetius as guest. The event will be broadcasted via livestream. Further information
Polareis
Short news

What is life like beneath the polar ice?

Under this title, AWI Director Antje Boetius will give a lecture in the new online format "Garden Talk" on December 8 at 8:30 pm. There, she will talk about the life forms under the polar ice and thus about one of the most undiscovered regions on the planet. Afterwards, she will be available to answer questions from all participants. Further information
Ulva lactuca algae on Sylt
Online news

Ulva Tomorrow’s ‘Wheat of the Sea’

Over the past decade, interest in using the marine coastal areas as a source of alternative, sustainable food production has grown significantly. A team of experts from 28 countries, including scientists from the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) has launched the SeaWheat project as a part of the EU program “COST” to modernise traditional aquatic diet from the coastal seas to make them more sustainable and healthier.
Dried out sunflower field
Press releases

Drought risk in the Northern Hemisphere rises with intensified warming

Over the next few decades, anthropogenic climate change and the resultant changes in the global water cycle will produce a significant rise in drought frequency in the Northern Hemisphere. An international team of scientists led by climate researchers from the Alfred Wegener Institute arrive at this conclusion in a new study released today in the journal npj Climate and Atmospheric Science. The experts analysed climate simulations produced by the latest generation of models for three different emissions-and-development scenarios and investigated the…
[Translate to English:] Eiskern
Press releases

Beyond EPICA explores the climate of the past – drilling commences

The climatic and environmental history of our planet is hidden in the ice: it harbours information on the temperature development and atmospheric composition dating back centuries and even millennia. In the context of the project Beyond EPICA-Oldest Ice, an international team of researchers hopes to unlock that information – by retrieving a core sample from the deep ice of the Antarctic, which contains climate data from the past 1.5 million years. Experts from the Alfred Wegener Institute make up part of the team. Initial drilling is about to begin.