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Discover the latest updates on our activities, team and research findings. You can browse, filter by category or type, or search by keywords.

Sea-ice trackers - Picture1

Sea-ice trackers: Using GPS and Iridium satellites to follow sea ice break-out events

Date: 2024
Type: Update
Authors: Inga Smith
Summary: In spring 2023, researchers travelled to Antarctica to place GPS trackers on the sea ice. For the first time, multiple sea ice trackers are allowing the break-out of sea ice in McMurdo Sound to be studied in real time.
ASP

New leaders to shape Antarctic Science Platform’s future

Date: 2024
Type: Update
Authors: Antarctic Science Platform
Summary: The Antarctic Science Platform is delighted to announce two new senior appointments to our team. Together, this pair will lead the Platform’s future strategic direction and develop a second 7-year research programme.
2024 01 28 meeting CR basler trasnfer team Lana

Ross Sea Voyage Update #4: Katabatic winds

Date: 2024
Type: Update
Summary: Sixty knot freezing winds cascaded off the ice sheet and blasted out over the coastal ocean – in an event that persisted for several days. The team is inside a wind-forced coastal polynya; that's where sea ice is made.
2024 01 17 NZ team on 16th leg1

Ross Sea Voyage Update #3: Terra Nova Bay

Date: 2024
Type: Update
Summary: The  RV Laura Bassi headed to the Italian Mario Zuchelli Station. The weather has been very calm. (Spoiler alert: There will be wind. Lots of it. This is Antarctica.)
20231214 115900

Measuring Antarctic warming with moss

Date: 2024
Type: In the media
Summary: When it comes to Antarctic ice melt, how do we attribute retreat to climate change? For Dr Charles Lee, a microbial ecologist, the answer lies in measuring moss.
2024 01 12 cross ant circle Craig Stevens

Ross Sea Voyage Update #2: Crossing the Line

Date: 2024
Type: Update
Summary: The RV Laura Bassi has crossed the Antarctic circle (66° 34’S), and last night the team spotted their first iceberg through the fog.
Leaving Lyttelton

Ross Sea Voyage Update #1: Leaving Lyttelton

Date: 2024
Type: Update
Summary: The Ross Sea Voyage 2024 is underway. Seven scientists from the Antarctic Science Platform departed Lyttleton at 1700 on 6 January on Italy’s RV Laura Bassi icebreaker, with around 25 Italian colleagues. This climate-focused mission will spend two months at sea.
Fig. 8180: Byrd Glacier Study

Rock Clocks: Using cosmogenic nuclides to reconstruct past ice sheet change

Date: 2023
Summary: Researchers are about to return to Antarctica in search of rocks. Not just any rocks – rocks on mountain tops that have been dropped off by thinning ice since the last ice age.

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