The Borneo Post

Colombian mission to Antarctica analyzes climate change footprints

- ABOARD THE ARC SIMON BOLIVAR, Antarctica:

Colombia’s 10th Antarctic Expedition is making its way to the far reaches of the continent, exploring remote and almost untouched places inhabited by penguins, whales and the occasional seal.

The Colombian Navy’s ARC Simon Bolivar is taking aquatic samples in Antarctica and advancing scientific research on climate change amid huge blocks of ice and frost.

“Antarctica is the world’s refrigerat­or,” Pablo Araujo, a researcher at the Central University of Ecuador, told AFP on board the ship, which is home to 39 researcher­s, 11 Colombian projects and nine internatio­nal cooperatio­n projects with four countries.

“What we want to see is how climate change is affecting the world’s refrigerat­or and how that affects the whole quantity of nutrients (in the sea),” says the white-coated scientist.

On board the ship, the Ecuadoran researcher is carrying out a project to model Antarctic ecosystems using machine learning techniques, a branch of artificial intelligen­ce focused on the study of statistica­l algorithms.

With the applicatio­n of these models and the use of satellite images, researcher­s are studying the dynamics of greenhouse gas fluxes in Antarctic ecosystems.

One Colombian team is launching a battery of Niskin bottles, used to take water samples, into the ocean.

“Once (they) come to the surface, we proceed to take these samples for later analysis,” said Alexis Grattz, a researcher from the Directorat­e General of Maritime Affairs, wearing a thick red mackintosh, gloves and a hat.

At the Ecuadoran scientific station, located at Punta Fort Williams on Greenwich Island, the maritime authority installed a portable weather station to record atmospheri­c pressure oscillatio­ns in the area.

These measuremen­ts are taken to “determine and help us understand more about these variations in sea level, understand­ing it as... an important indicator in the evolution of climate change,” said Maritza Moreno, another researcher at the Directorat­e General of Maritime Affairs.

A Turkish mission, meanwhile, is studying the levels of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbo­ns (PAHs) — which result from burning fossil fuels, wood, trash and tobacco — in Antarctic soil.

Burak Karacik, a professor at Istanbul Technical University, said he is collecting sediment samples.

“I will analyze these sediment samples for persistent organic pollutants, and we will look at the effects of humans, here, in this environmen­t,” he added. — AFP

 ?? ?? Colombian scientist Diego Mujica, member of the Malpelo foundation, takes a sample of the skin of a Humpback whale at the Gerlache Strait, which separates the Palmer Archipelag­o from the Antarctic Peninsula, in Antarctica. — AFP photo
Colombian scientist Diego Mujica, member of the Malpelo foundation, takes a sample of the skin of a Humpback whale at the Gerlache Strait, which separates the Palmer Archipelag­o from the Antarctic Peninsula, in Antarctica. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia