 |
 |
Drilling through Antarctica's Pine Island Glacier to learn about Ice Sheets and Sea Level Change
Bob Bindschadler and twelve of his colleagues from the U.S.A. and Britain are studying ice sheets in Antarctica to gather data that will help us make better predictions of future sea level changes. The group of scientists will place instruments on and beneath Pine Island Glacier in the Amundsen Sea Sector of West Antarctica during December 2007.
Click on the links below to read postcards from Bob Bindschadler describing his reaearch and adventures in the frozen south!
|
Postcards
On PIG Ice Shelf from Bob Bindschadler, January 28, 2008
Christmas in McMurdo from Bob Bindschadler, December 26, 2007
Antarctic Gateway from Bob Bindschadler , December 18, 2007
|
Postcards from the Poles
You might also be interested in:

For a glacier to develop, the amount of snow that falls must be more than the amount of snow that melts each year. This means that glaciers are only found in places where a large amount of snow falls each
...more
Antarctica is unique. It is the coldest, windiest, and driest continent on Earth. The land is barren and mostly covered with a thick sheet of ice. Antarctica is almost entirely south of the Antarctic Circle
...more
I'm striking a very triumphant pose and rightfully so. I'm standing on the ice shelf of the Pine Island Glacier (PIG) - a site many colleagues said I could not get to alive. Truth be told, the ice shelf
...more
Here's a Christmas card from Antarctica. I had hoped to be farther toward our goal of the ice shelf, but an airplane (a refitted DC-3) we were counting on to move our cargo had an "incident" and is out
...more
Hello, We were able to get to McMurdo Station in Antarctica pretty quickly: we left the States on December 10, added a day crossing the International Date Line, rested a day in New Zealand, then caught
...more
When scientists go out to explore the Earth they often wind up in pretty interesting places and doing pretty interesting things. And they are learning more about how our planet works through the fieldwork.
...more
This is my 10th year with the Anchorage School District as a science teacher, currently working with K-12 teachers around the district rather than in a classroom. My most recent classroom time was as a
...more