Archive of News and Press Releases
Federal Cross of Merit for polar researchers from Russia and Potsdam
Federal President Frank-Walter Steinmeier awarded Prof. Dr. Hans-Wolfgang Hubberten and Prof. Dr. Michail Nikolaewitsch Grigoriev the Federal Cross of Merit 1st Class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany in recognition of their longstanding work in the field of German-Russian cooperation.
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MOSAiC talk at the SMM
MOSAiC expedition leader Markus Rex gave a lecture on the Arctic research expedition at the SMM. The trade fair is considered the world's leading trade fair for the maritime industry and was held as a purely digital conference for the first time this year. The patron of SMM Digital was the Federal Chancellor Angela Merkel. The MOSAiC lecture is available online.
We left for a while!
Prior to publishing the first weekly report, on behalf of the whole COSMUS team I would like to thank all members of the Logistic Department of the Alfred Wegener Institute, because without their unconditional support this expedition would not have been possible.
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The Marine Soundscape and Anthropogenic Noise
Due to construction work in the sea, shipping, and gas and oil extraction, the oceans are becoming increasingly louder. A comprehensive international study has now shown that this noise affects the behaviour of far more animal species than previously assumed. The researchers call for us to listen closely to the ocean and to finally regulate noise worldwide. Viable technological solutions are already available.
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The Arctic Ocean was covered by a shelf ice and filled with freshwater
The Arctic Ocean was covered by up to 900 m thick shelf ice and was filled entirely with freshwater at least twice in the last 150,000 years. This surprising finding, reported in the latest issue of the journal Nature, is the result of long-term research by scientists from the Alfred Wegener Institute and the MARUM. With a detailed analysis of the composition of marine deposits, the scientists could demonstrate that the Arctic Ocean as well as the Nordic Seas did not contain sea-salt in at least two glacial periods. Instead, these oceans were filled with…
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Climate Research in the Southern Ocean
The Alfred Wegener Institute has risen to the challenge of undertaking an expedition to the Weddell Sea in the Antarctic under pandemic conditions. Consequently, the participants in this year’s first Polarstern expedition will be able to resume their long-term measurements in the Southern Ocean, gathering data that forms the basis for our understanding of polar processes and for urgently needed climate forecasts.
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One-two punch against corals: how stress factors interact
A new study in the prestigious journal Science Advances shows that stress from rising water temperatures reduces ability of corals to adapt to ocean acidification.
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New Information Material on a Proposal for a Marine Protected Area in the Antarctic Weddell Sea
The goal of the international Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) is to create a network of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) in the Southern Ocean. In the course of revising the proposal to establish a Marine Protected Area in the Weddell Sea, researchers at the Alfred Wegener Institute have also updated the fact sheet and short video about this proposal. The two publications illustrate why the Weddell Sea must be protected.
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Safely Navigating on the Ice
Driving across ice in a truck or snowcat is a dangerous undertaking. Especially since climate change means that the ice conditions are always unpredictable. But in the Arctic, it’s often the only way to reach your destination. With a new navigation system, known as “TransIce Nav”, Alexandra Zuhr and Tabea Rettelbach want to make journeys like this much safer in future. The two Potsdam-based researchers from the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI), took the first prize in the prestigious European “Copernicus…
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South of the Roaring Forties - approaching Atka Bay
The expedition continues to work according to plan. A fact that is probably not very exciting for readers, thus, for us very enjoyable. The Roaring Forties were more like Wavy Forties, as the announced low-pressure area arriving from west brought less extreme wind speeds but instead a rather unpleasant wave. The thermometer dropped by more than 10 ° C within one day and finally down to the current 0 ° C.
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