UAF SCIENTISTS SHARE RESULTS OF ARCTIC RESEARCH ON GLOBAL WARMING
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Nov. 9, 2001
Fairbanks, Alaska Several hundred international scientists studying
environment change in the Arctic will meet Nov. 14-17 in Salt Lake City
to report the results of recently completed studies that document major
changes and improve scientific understanding of the Arctic as an integrated
regional system.
The meetings are the first in which terrestrial, marine and atmospheric
researchers sponsored by the National Science Foundations Office
of Polar Programs will meet jointly to share data, discuss its scientific
implications and coordinate future integrated efforts.
The objective of the research is to contribute fundamental documentation
and understanding of the Arctics terrestrial, marine and atmospheric
environments in support of Arctic System Science and the U.S. Global Change
Research Program, leading to an enhanced predictive capability.
Scientists increasingly recognize that the Arctic plays a key role in
the Earth's climate system. A complex suite of interrelated, atmospheric,
oceanic and terrestrial changes have occurred in the Arctic in recent
decades. These changes affect virtually every part of the arctic environment
and have global and societal repercussions. There is evidence these changes
are connected with atmospheric circulation of the Northern Hemisphere
- commonly known as the greenhouse effect. Many scientists believe the
Arctic is likely to continue to warm more rapidly than the rest of the
globe.
Research is underway to gain understanding into what feedback processes
on climate or ecosystems may be involved in the recent changes, and what
the long-term impacts may be.
Important topics to be discussed at the meetings include:
- The role of Arctic ecosystems in releasing or removing carbon dioxide
from the atmosphere (and therefore its influence on current rates of
global warming).
- Changes in the Arctic Ocean and its overlying atmosphere that began
in the early 1990s that are unprecedented in the modern scientific record.
These include an approximate 35 percent reduction in the volume of sea
ice, a massive re-organization of the hydrography of the Arctic Ocean
and major ecosystem changes in the Bering Sea.
- New research initiatives designed to document and better understand
the above changes, including their long-term societal impacts.
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Note to Editors: Several key opportunities to interview scientists and
view their research findings are available during the event.
CONTACT: Christopher Shock, Information Coordinator for the Boreal Ecology Research Unit at the University of Alaska Fairbanks at (907) 474-6364 to make arrangements for coverage, or for additional information or at the Salt Lake Plaza Hotel, (801) 521-0130 during the event.
CJB/11-09-01/02-023

