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![]() by Staff Writers Concordia, South Pole (ESA) Aug 25, 2022
The 12-member crew of Concordia research station woke up to a most welcome sight in early August: sunrise, after four months of Antarctic darkness. The return of the sun is a major milestone for the isolated and confined crew; they are three-quarters of the way through their Antarctic residency and will soon prepare to welcome the summer influx of researchers at the base. ESA-sponsored medical doctor Hannes Hagson snapped this picture from the Station's front door in early on 5 August. "Time here has the strange quality of both passing really quickly and very slowly at the same time," he shared, "and in just two days we expect the return of the sun to grace us here at 75 degrees south! The returning daylight certainly has us all cheered up and starting to sense the beginning of the final part of this adventure." The winter months in Antarctica are tough, with temperatures dropping below -80C under a pitch black sky. To combat winter blues, the crew keep busy, celebrating mid-winter (and the half-way point in their Antarctic stay) in June with their own traditions and taking part in the Antarctic Winter Games in July. Stations with a winter crew across Antarctica participate in a series of physical challenges and friendly competition. With August comes not only sunlight, but production work for the Antarctic Film Festival, with each base submitting an original piece. Check out last year's winning entry from Concordia in the Open category. Of course, it's not all fun and games. Hannes has been busy with biomedical research, as he continues to gather data from crew urine, stool and blood samples, as well as cognitive and psychological measures through questionnaires to study the effects of isolated, confined and extreme environments on the human body. In October the crew will begin to prepare the base for the summer campaign. Rooms and tents must be prepared for the 40 or so incoming researchers.
![]() ![]() NASA studies find previously unknown loss of Antarctic ice Pasadena CA (JPL) Aug 11, 2022 The greatest uncertainty in forecasting global sea level rise is how Antarctica's ice loss will accelerate as the climate warms. Two studies published Aug. 10 and led by researchers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California reveal unexpected new data about how the Antarctic Ice Sheet has been losing mass in recent decades. One study, published in the journal Nature, maps how iceberg calving - the breaking off of ice from a glacier front - has changed the Antarctic coastline over t ... read more
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