The Free Press Journal

COVID-19 AND EARLY ICE MELT CHALLENGE ARCTIC SCIENCE MISSION

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They prepared for icy cold winds and trained to be on the watch for polar bears, but a pandemic just wasn't part of the program. Now, dozens of scientists are waiting in quarantine for the allclear to join a year-long Arctic research mission aimed at improving the models used for forecastin­g climate change, just as the expedition reaches a crucial phase.

For a while, the internatio­nal mission looked like it might have to be called off, as country af ter country went into lockdown because of the virus, scuppering plans to bring fresh supplies and crew to the German research vessel Polarstern that's been moored in the high Arctic since last year. Organisers managed to fly out a handful of people via Canada last month. The rest of the crew will be exchanged with the help of two other German research ships that will meet the Polarstern on the sea ice edge.

That upcoming rendezvous will force the Polarstern to abandon its current position for three weeks at a critical time in the Arctic cycle. “We are on the cusp right now of the onset of the sea ice melt season and that's a really important transition," said Shupe. "That could happen when the ship is gone. It's a distinct risk we face." To avoid missing out on key data, researcher­s will leave some instrument­s behind, including an 11-meter (36-foot) tower used for atmospheri­c measuremen­ts, and hope that it's still there when they return.

"The ice could just come together and destroy everything," said Shupe. "Hopefully that doesn't happen." Adding to the problem is the fact that the sea ice is cracking up and moving about earlier than anticipate­d, a sign of possible future changes to the Arctic if global warming continues.

Scientists on the 140-million-euro (USD 158 million) expedition have already gathered valuable data since setting out last September with 100 researcher­s and crew from 17 nations including the United States, France, China and Britain.

Shupe said the measuremen­ts that scientists were able to per form during the long Arctic winter will improve the models they use to calculate how snow insulates sea ice and affects the movement of energy.

Measuremen­ts of tiny airborne particles can also help shed light on the role they play in trapping heat or reflecting sunlight, especially if there's less ice and more open ocean as temperatur­es in the Arctic continue to rise.

The intense interest into research about the coronaviru­s could have a positive knock-on effect for fields such as climate science, said Shupe. Still, the researcher­s on MOSAiC are hoping to deal with one problem at a time, hence the strict quarantine to avoid any chance of carrying the coronaviru­s into the Arctic.

"We definitely don't want anybody getting sick and we don't want to take that out to the ship," said Shupe. "Realistica­lly, it's actually one of the safest places on Earth right now."

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