| Out of the office and up Denali! by Amy Hartley, Geophysical Institute |
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Kevin Abnett, a software engineer from the university's Geophysical Institute, and Tohru Saito of the International Arctic Research Center, scaled Denali--the traditional Athabascan Indian name for Mount McKinley. They were out for 20 days as they hauled and then installed 20 pounds of equipment at an outcrop just south of the peak's summit. The weather station--an upgrade and replacement for one installed earlier which malfunctioned and was no longer transmitting data--will record wind speed and direction, relative humidity, barometric pressure and temperature.
"In 2002, when I first got the invitation to go, I said, 'No--absolutely not! I prefer oxygen in the air I breathe!'" Abnett said. "It sounded so ridiculous to me at the time, I declined. But as I started to think about it more, I realized I wanted to understand the conditions on the mountain better, so I decided to make the attempt this summer."
"The physical endurance required at altitude was the most challenging," Abnett said. "I just couldn't seem to get enough air in my lungs, especially carrying a 40-pound load. No matter how hard I breathed, it just wasn't enough. After a few days of acclimatizing it was better, but still difficult."
Having been up the mountain before, Saito was supportive of Abnett. He and Abnett hiked together and practiced rope-climbing, and he explained what Abnett could expect. "Getting to know someone before you go is important," Saito said. "When you're doing something like this, it's you against the mountain. It's you against all those elements, so it's nice to have someone you know there to help you." "The Japanese climbers were just great," Abnett said. "They helped me out many times on my way up there." Abnett set the weather station equipment up at the 14,000 foot medical camp on June 22, 2004 and ran some tests. On June 27 the Japanese crew climbed to 18,735 feet and assembled the equipment at its permanent location, then continued to the summit. The whole team was down at Kahiltna Base Camp by June 30, when more tests confirmed the weather station was transmitting as intended. "We're receiving the signal just fine in Fairbanks now," Abnett said. Daily updates on progress of the climbers were posted at Weather data for everyone
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UAF feature stories Body photo credits: Photo by Amy Hartley, photo by Ned Rozell. | ||||||
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