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Images tagged "polaris-project"

Undergraduate student extracts a tree core from a larch tree in Siberia. A large, blood-filled mosquito in Siberia. Polaris students collect benthic invertebrates from Shuchi Lake. A quiet night for the lakes team on Shuchi Lake. A speedboat cruises up the Panteleikha River. The 2009 students head up the road to Shuchi Lake for fieldwork. Two undergradute students fill cuvettes with water from a small Siberian stream. Siberian mosquitoes. Summer snow flurries. The lake team collects a water sample using a Niskin bottle. Rusting barge on the Panteleikha River, Cherskiy, Siberia. Cranes in the port town of Cherskiy, Siberia, along the Kolyma River. Thermokarst lake, formed by thawing permafrost. Summer swim in the Panteleikha. Andy Bunn sends a blog post from the barge. Sergei Zimov guides students onto the quicksand-like beach at Duvannyi Yar. Nikita Zimov leads the way onto the beach. Ancient remains litter the beach. Sergei Zimov lectures at Duvannyi Yar. Andy Bunn holds a mammoth femur. Dry, crumbly soil is all that remains when ice wedges thaw. A larch tree hangs off the edge of the permafrost exposure. The exposed riverbank at Duvannyi Yar. Plants sprout out of the carbon-rich soil at Duvannyi Yar. A small boat navigates shallow water below ice wedges and baydzerakhs (mounds of thawing Pleistocene permafrost soils) at the riverbank exposure of Duvannyi Yar on the Kolyma River in the Siberian Arctic. The barge on the Kolyma is framed by trees falling over the riverbank's crumbling edge. A Russian researcher takes a soil profile from an ice wedge at the exposed riverbank of Duvannyi Yar, Kolyma River, Siberian Arctic. Valentin Spektor and the permafrost team take samples of ancient ice-filled soil. Nikolai Torgorvkin holds a sample of permafrost soil. Eroding permafrost soil colors the water brown as it is leeched into the Kolyma River in the Siberian Arctic. Ancient jawbone from Pleistocene megafauna. The barge: a floating home for the Polaris undergraduate students. Joanne Heslop and Nicholai Torgovkin listen to a lecture on the barge. Arctic cottongrass, Eriophorum callitrix, grows alongside an abandoned boat and storage tank. Professor Andy Bunn on the barge. Erin Seybold, Moira Hough, and Kayla Henson pick through a lake sediment sample. Breakfast on the barge. Science & chocolate. Moira Hough writes in her journal on the barge. Polaris students filter water on the barge. Blaize Denfeld and Professor Karen Frey filter water on the barge. Professor Bill Sobczak runs an experiment in the wet lab. Claire Griffin runs samples in the Orbita lab. Nicholai Torgovkin weighs a permafrost sample. Sergei Zimov, director of the Northeast Science Station. Zimov's barge at Cherskiy sleeps 20 people, and is the home of the Polaris Project students and faculty during the summer. Sample vials hold specimens of benthic invertebrates from Siberian aquatic ecosystems including lakes and streams. First leg: the 2009 students meet up in the Dulles airport. Kayla Henson reads papers on the flight to Moscow. Red Square. Karen Frey takes in an arctic sunrise on the flight from Moscow to Yakutsk. Fistful of passports. A mountain of baggage in the Yakutsk hotel. Andy Bunn and Karen Frey show students satellite images of the Cherskiy area in a Yakutsk hotel lobby. Yakutian children perform at a reception in Yakutsk. Travis Drake and Erin Seybold investigate ice crystals growing from the roof of a permafrost tunnel in the Melnikov Permafrost Institute, Yakutsk, Siberia, Russia. Kayla Henson and Max Janicek point at all of the stopping points on the 2009 flight route to Cherskiy. Professor Sudeep Chandra checks email while waiting for the flight. Killing time waiting for the flight to Cherskiy. Load-it-yourself on the flight to Cherskiy. The arctic landscape unfolds on the flight north to Cherskiy. Professor Sudeep Chandra makes a list of what he wants to measure this year. Siberian landscape - thermokarst lakes formed by thawing permafrost. Moscow at twilight. Nesting dolls at the market. Fur hats at the market. The craft market Izmailovsky. Professor John Schade and Moira Hough discuss her results in a Moscow hotel room. A trip to the treeless tundra is a highlight of the Polaris summer field season. Moira Hough examines tundra soil. The 2009 team takes a break on the way north to the tundra. Abandoned boat on the shores of the Kolyma River. Nikita Zimov pulls one of the small boats ashore. Snowball fight in July. Professor Karen Frey takes a water sample from the clear waters of the Sukharnaya River. No trees to block the view on the tundra. Hiking through cotton-grass on the tundra. Sunset over the Kolyma River.
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Contact: info@thepolarisproject.org

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