Polar Science

About Dan


  • I'm not a polar explorer or adventurer! I'm a scientist, a geologist, who is very lucky to be able to work in Antarctica. When I was 11 years old, I saw a short film about scientists working there, and decided that I wanted to do it too.

11 February 2008

A Study Tour to Antarctica

I've been guiding voyages in the Arctic and Antarctic for a few years now, and the passengers are (almost) always great people. They love the outdoors, are curious and willing to learn anything they can about whatever new environment they find themselves in, and often have a particular passion to feed: history, birdwatching, or sailing, for example. But this next trip will be a new experience for me.

Storm at sea

I'm sailing this afternoon on the 'Professor Molchanov', completely chartered by a study tour from Victoria University of Wellington, in New Zealand, where I first studied geology and made my first trip to Antarctica. The university has been doing research in Antarctica for 50 years, mostly coordinated by the Antarctic Research Centre.

Zodiac

In 2007 there was a reunion of old expeditioners, and now a couple of us are acting as guides to share our experience with a group of interested people from the wider university community. The ARC has a strong history of research into the history of climate change in Antarctica, most recently leading drilling studies to study the history of the ice sheet, such as the ANDRILL programme.

The 46 participants are well prepared, having had a series of lectures on antarctic history, science, and law before leaving Wellington. Now we're sailing off to see the real thing, and they're hungry for information to enrich their own experiences! As with the last trip, I expect to be too busy working to write blog reports, but a journalist on board, Stephanie Gray, will be maintaining her own Slice of Ice.

Antarctic mountains

Who knows exactly what we'll see? You can never be sure, making a trip into a total wilderness. But I'm sure it will be both interesting and fun!

ciao from Ushuaia,

Dan

20 November 2007

A Day in a PMV

It's been a busy few days.

On Friday we installed one GPS receiver at Wewak airport, and arranged batteries and transport for the other sites.

GPS setup The equipment here is quite similar to what we were installing in Antarctica: a GPS receiver and antenna, powered by batteries and a solar panel. But here the antenna is on a tripod, not bolted to the ground like in Antarctica, because it only has to stand a few days, and because we are measuring the horizontal movement of the earth, and not the vertical (it's hard to measure the height of a tripod accurately enough to measure vertical positions). And we don't need to transfer the data
by satellite here - we just download it from the receiver every day or two.

On Saturday we made a trip along the inland road east from Wewak about 120 km, to the town of Angoram, on the Sepik River. We installed two more sets of equipment on the way, in Angoram and the village of Tring, both on survey markers that have been measured several times in previous years. We leave the equipment in a small tent to shelter it from the Sun and rain, and ask the local people to take care of it until we come back again.

The sites are left to make measurements for four days, but today we went back to check them. When we don't have all the gear to carry (each site weighs about 80 kg in total), we don't need to have our own vehicle. I prefer to travel by PMV, or 'Private Motor Vehicle', which are the private transport services operating all over Papua New Guinea. They vary from small vans in the towns, to trucks in the countryside, and 4WD vehicles for the mountain areas with rough roads and river crossings. It's a good way to travel and talk with the local people, and see where they are going and what they're doing.

Changing tyres on the PMVToday our PMV had bad luck, with several flat tyres to be changed and fixed along the way, but we checked both sites, which were operating normally. Due to the travel delays, we got back to Wewak after dark, but the apologetic driver dropped us at our door. And it was nice coming back through the hills at dusk - the road deserted compared to daytime, the smokey smell of cooking and the glow of small fires in the jungle across across the valley, at huts invisible in the darkness.

Better luck next time,

Dan

16 May 2007

"Cool" Classroom Chat

Wow! Dan was just here with us at Questacon, involved in an online chat with a whole class of Year 6 students from a State School in Brisbane, Queensland.

Dan Chat

The class was the same one that was asking questions via comments on the blog, and Monica, their teacher arranged the chat for now, while Dan is back in Canberra.

We're really keen to hear back from the school about what the kids thought of the opportunity, and what they talked about after the chat. Dan had sent Monica some photos to help move along the discussion. One of them is very funny!

We captured the chat - here it is!

Dan> Good morning.

Monica> Hi Dan, Sorry we're late. The kids were a vit late getting back from sport

Dan> We're all ready at this end now too.

Veronica> Hi Dan

Emma> Hi Dan

Dan> 'morning class. How was sport?

Brendon> hey dan

Veronica> It was fun!

Emma> Fun! We did highjump!

Kirsty> fun

Courtney> it was fun

Dan> wow, there's a lot of you in the room now. Who's got the first question?

Veronica> What did you study over in Antarctica?

Emma> How many year did you have to study until you could go to Antartica

Dan> I did my first trip to Antarctica after three years at university.

Dan> I did a project there, and wrote a report about it to finish the last year of my science degree.

Erin> how many trips have u done

Justin> hi Dan

Dan> I've studied a lot of different things on my trips to Antarctica, but always some sort of geology.

Dan> I've done nine summers as a scientist, and I've also been a few times working on tourist ships.

Brendon> Have you discovered any new species of anything?

Ellie> has it been a great experience

Dan> I don't think I've seen any new species. In Antarctica, there are lots and lots of animals, but not many different species.

Dan> It's always been a great experience. Even though I've been a lot of times, it's always exciting.

Courtney> what is the lowest temperiture youve had so far?

Justin> Have you seen whales

Monica-> Survival Suit

Dan> I think the coldest was about -30°C. But the wind was also blowing then, so it felt a lot colder. We didn't work outside much; mostly we stayed in the tent.

Natalie> have you been to the Arctic before?

Shane> Have you had any frost bites

Dan> Yes, we usually see whales from the ship, on the way to and from Antarctica. Mostly Humpback and Minke whales, but sometimes also Fin whales, which are really big ones.

Dan> Yes, I also work in the arctic sometimes. I'll be going there in July and August this year.

Justin> wow

Dan> I'll go to Svalbard to work on a sailing ship, and to Greenland to do some science work. I'll be in a place called Narsarsuaq. Maybe you can find it on the map.

Shane> Is that really fashion over there

Tayla> hi

Dan> That picture is on the icebreaker, Aurora Australis, before we left Hobart.

Justin> what did you do when you were stuck in a tent.

Ellie> wow and hi dan

Dan> We had to practice using the lifeboats and survival suits, in case there was an accident.

Monica-> King Neptune

Dan> Luckily, that was the only time we had to do it!

Monica> More spectacular Dan fashion

Courtney> has there been an accident so far?

Damian> That it looks funny.

Erin> what has been the longest time you have spent in a tent?

Dan> This one is of King Neptune. On a ship, when you cross the equator, or the Antarctic Circle, he comes on board to initiate people who've never done it before.

Dan> Usually that means getting a bit dirty... kissing a fish, and having vegemite smeared on your face!

Dan> Luckily I have been before, so I didn't have to do it this time.

Tayla> how long did it take to travel from antarctica to australia ?

Taryn> hi

Damian> Did the fish turn into a prince

Sean> are you looking fored to the artic

Dan> This time, it took 12 days to get there. But it took more than three weeks to get back, because we visited two other stations on the way.

Dan> The fish didn't turn in to a prince... maybe because we didn't have a princess on board to kiss it!

Dan> Am I looking forward to the arctic? YES! I love travelling to wild places. And I've never been to Greenland before, so that will be all new and exciting.

Vanessa> i would just love to go to the places that you go to

Sean> iwould love to go to antartica

Dan> Well, there are a lot of ways to get there. You can work there, as a scientist or a mechanic, or a chef, or almost anything.

Damian> have you seen a polar bear in the wild before

Dan> If you decide that you want to go, I'm sure you will think of a way to do it.

Vanessa> my mum would just love to here about all of this i will tell her straight after scholl

Monica-> GPS site

Dan> Yes, in the arctic we often see bears. It's best to see them from the ship, because that's safer. But I carry a gun when we go walking on land, just in case. I've never had to use it yet.

Matthew> do u like goin to cold laces or warm places?

Taryn> i would love to go to antarctic and see the animals

Cody> hi dan how it gowing

Gemma> What birds do you see in the Antarctic.

Michael> hi Dan

Sean> i like playing in the snow

Dan> I like wild places, hot and cold. Ihave also worked in Papua New Guinea... also wonderful!

Monica> I've just shown them the photos of the camp toilet Dan.
Camp Toilet
(is that an Antarctic long-drop? Geoff)

Sean> was png a great place?

Dan> Where did you play in the snow, Sean? I wasn't sure how many of you Queensland kids would have seen it before.

Emily> is it cold to sit on the toilet

Christen> when you are going to the toilet has anyone ever seen you?

Sean> in new zealand and tasmania

Vanessa> it must be weird, how did it fell going in that thing or did you get the hang of it

Tayla>

Dan> Yes, it's cold to go to the toilet! So you don't waste any time there.

Dan> There's usually not any people to see you, but once I had ten penguins standing watching me!

Christen> I saw the snow in new zealand

Monica-> Christmas

Vanessa> how funny

Gemma> Hey Dan, have you ever been to Alaska? It's awsome!

Maddisyn> Hey Dan

Tayla> what do you do in ur own time

Emily R.> I been to the snow in NZ and I went skiing

Matthew> :}whats with the mr potatohead?

Michael> how was xmas

Dan> This was our Christmas tree. There were just five of us in a little hut, 500 km from the nearest people.

Emily> how long do you stay in antartica

Aaron> what did you get for christmans

Josh N> what equiptment did you use?

Sean> wow

Vanessa> it doesn't look like a big one

Dan> I got some books, and some chocolate.

Cody> cool

Aaron> what where the books about

Maddisyn> COOL

Dan> This time I was away for about four months, with about three months in Antarctica.

Vanessa> i will read about antartica and maybe it will convince me to go

Dan> My longest trip was four and a half months, and my shortest just one month.

Cody> the news paper muster been good there

Aaron> do you like travelling in big ships?

Dan> We did get a newspaper every day from Australia, by email.

Dan> Only when we were at the base, of course! Not in the tent.

Gemma> How long do you plan to stay in the Arctic for?

Bronte> what do you plan on studying in the artic

Emily> whats the difference between the artic and antartic

Monica-> Questacon Flag

Dan> Small ships are better than big ships! I like working on sailing ships best - I'll put some pictures on the blog when I'm in the arctic.

Aaron> what do you do for fun up there?

Dan> I'll be working in Greenland for about three weeks. We'll be measuring sea-level change, which tells us how the glaciers on Greenland are changing.

Sean> bye dan got to go

Dan> Differences between artcic and antarctic: Antarctica is colder, and has penguins. The arctic has less land (more sea), and bears but no penguins. There are whales and seals at both poles.

Monica> Is that something to do with global warming?

Tayla> thanks for ur time, bye

Monica> Lunch bell has gone dan. We have to lunch

Gemma> Thanks for going online and chatting to us Dan.

Cody> thanks or your time bye

Emma> Thanks for your time is been great to have a chat!! Lunch Time gotta go!

Emily R.> thanks for coming and chatting to us, bye

Aaron> bye dan and thanks

Emily> thankyou for your time. bye!

Maddisyn> Thanks heeps Dan 4 all the information about your stay in antarctica

Dan> Well, it is related. But because I'm a geologist, I usually study changes that happened thousands of years ago. But that all helps us understand what the glaciers will do as the earth gets warmer.

Christen> thanks for all the time you've spent answering questions Dan,bye

Josh N> thanks for the time typeing to us all

Dan> It was fun talking to you!

Michael> thanks a lot dan it was cool.

James> thanks dan for your time

Dan> If you have more questions, you can still send them to the blog. I'll be writing more in the next few days.

Bronte> thak you dan for you time

Monica> Thanks so much Dan. They've all gone to lunch.

Dan> I'll try to also write the blog from the arctic, so keep watching it!

Dan> What a rush! that went very fast.

Monica> It's quite a task managing 30 kids on a chat at the same time. But they did enjoy it. The room was very noisy. Good noisy.

28 January 2007

The biggest glacier in the world!

Once again, we're back at Davis after some days 'in the field'.

Technically, I would be able to write an entry for the blog while we are out there, but it would be complicated: my laptop doesn't work very well in the cold, so I have to get it warm in my sleeping bag, and connect it to a bigger battery. Then I have to use a satellite telephone to send the email; the connection is too slow to send pictures, and sometimes drops out suddenly. And we're usually pretty tired - working outdoors all day and living in tents takes a lot of time and energy.

So really, it's just easier to wait 'til I get back to base, where I can use a computer in comfort, indoors, and have a good internet connection. Sometimes I have used email to communicate with my colleagues in Australia while in the field, but mostly we talk on the satellite telephone, or use it to send SMS messages.

It's hard to describe how big Antarctica is, and how empty: the place we were working last week is about 750 km from Davis, that's about the same as from Melbourne to Newcastle, in Australia!

You can download a map of this area from the AAD (pdf, 3.6 MB). Davis is at the top right of the map, and we were at Wilson Bluff, almost the furthest south bit of rock in this region, at 74.3 S, 66.8 E.

There were three of us on this trip: Nick and I were joined by Alex, who works with Nick at Geoscience Australia. They were going to Wilson Bluff to do maintenance on another GPS station, and I had a new job: to service a seismic station installed there several years ago by Anya, a colleague at the ANU. Her instrument has a sensor in the ground recording earthquakes from all over the world, which she uses to study the rocks underneath Antarctica.

It's always exciting to arrive at an instrument site: to see whether it's still working, and what effect the storms of the previous winters have had.

Broken seismic equipment

At Wilson Bluff, we got a nasty surprise: both sites were crippled. Their solar panels had been blown over, a wind generator had broken off its mast, cables were snapped and instrument cases filled with ice.

Oh dear... we had a couple of days hard work to repair everything, and when we left, both sites were working again, and made stronger than before. We hope they will survive the next winter!

Dan on Wilson Bluff

Clearly, the weather can be pretty bad at Wilson Bluff, but we were lucky: one day with a bit of wind and snow, but mostly fine and sunny. Quite comfortable for living in tents, even though the temperature was 5 to 10 degrees below freezing. And we had time to go for a couple of walks in the evening, to enjoy this magnificent place. It's beautiful, but harsh and barren: we didn't see any plants or animals while we were there, just one tiny square centimetre of lichen.

After three days at Wilson Bluff, a CASA plane came and took us about 100 km to another site, called Dalton Corner.

Mawson Escarpment

A funny name for a mountain, but if you look on the map, you'll see that it's at the southern end of the Mawson Escarpment, a north-south chain of mountains about 100 km long. On their east side, the ice flows right up to the Mawson Escarpment, but on the west side, it's a spectacular long line of cliffs about 1000 m high.

Dalton Camp

At Dalton Corner, we have another GPS site, which we had to service. Here, the news was all good! We had lost contact with the instrument two years ago, so we didn't know if it was working or not, but when we arrived it was running exactly as it should be. I checked the data it had stored, and found that it had worked beautifully, turned itself off in the winter to save power, and on again in the spring when the sun returned, for the last two years, without anybody checking it!

Fantastic - it's a very nice feeling when equipment works correctly! So it wasn't much work to collect the data, upgrade some of the instruments, and replace the batteries with new ones.

Lambert Galcier

After finishing our work here, a CASA came to give us the most marvellous ride home, northwards along the Mawson Escarpment, above the Lambert Glacier. This is the largest glacier in the world, about 80 km wide and 500 km long, an enormous river of ice, slowly draining 35 cubic km of the Antarctic ice sheet into the sea every year.

Lambert Crevasses

When you fly over it, it doesn't seem to be something that can move, but it creeps along at one or two metres per day, and where it turns corners or stretches over buried mountains the surface breaks into vast crevasse fields, gaping chasms big enough to drop a house into. Some areas are smooth snow; others are covered by streams of meltwater. It's all beautiful.

Melt on Lambert Glacier

We had one more job to do before going back to base: the CASA stopped to refuel at Beaver Lake, and Alex, Nick and I raced up a hill to another GPS site, about 4.5 km away. At this one, we only had to remove all the instruments - it's not going to be used for another couple of years.

Coast South of Davis

Three hours later we were back at the plane, pretty tired from a hard fast walk! Then a couple more hours flight, along the coast in gorgeous low evening sunlight.

Happy Australia Day,

Dan

11 January 2007

Enderby Land

I spent the last few days far from here; camping at Mt Riiser-Larsen, in Enderby Land, about 1000 km west of Davis.

Ice patterns on the Southern Ocean

We flew there in the CASA planes; after leaving Davis we headed across the sea. It was wonderful to look down on the patterns of ice in the water, made by winds and currents.

Framnes Mountains from the air

After two and a half hours of flying, we arrived at another Australian base, Mawson, to refuel and pick up a couple of passengers. It's a beautiful place: the station is built on a rock perched between the ice sheet and the sea, and the plane landed near the Framnes Mountains, jagged ridges of rock poking through the ice.

Two CASA C212-400 aircraft

From there, we flew west for two more hours, over hundreds of kilometres of smooth ice sheet, enormous glaciers flowing into the frozen sea, barren islands of rock surrounded by ice or ocean, and sharp mountain ranges extending to the horizon. Antarctica is wild and beautiful almost everywhere you look at it, but from an aeroplane you can appreciate how enormous and bleak it is...magnificent!

Unloading the aircraft

We landed on a frozen lake, unloaded our equipment, and looked for a place to camp. One of the CASA's stayed with us, while the other flew further along the coast to the Japanese station, Syowa, where one of our colleagues had some work to do. We used a sled to carry our tents and food to the shore of the lake, while the pilots, Dan (not me!) and Troy, tied the plane to the ice, in case there was a storm while we were there. We also had an AAD field officer with us, Mick from Mawson.

Two tents, with a view to Mt Riiser-Larsen

We put up our tents on the snow not far from the plane, with a great view of Mt Riiser-Larsen on the other side of the lake, and made a place among the rocks to use as a kitchen - usually it's not too cold to eat outside, and the view is much nicer than inside a tent!

Like at the Bunger Hills, our job here was to install a GPS receiver, to measure how the land of Antarctica is moving. Nick and I did that together over the next two days.

While we were working, the other guys did a couple of long walks, and came back in the evening to cook dinner.

Eating out, having dinner

Cooking can take a long time in Antarctica, when you have to melt you water from snow, and cook on a small camping stove, so having Mick, Dan and Troy to help us meant that Nick and I could work several more hours each day. It makes a big difference to how much we can do - thanks guys!

GPS antenna and solar cells

The GPS system has an antenna which is bolted to the rock, and protected by a plastic dome so it doesn't get covered in snow in the winter. Solar panels provide the electricity, and all the batteries and instruments are inside an insulated box, to keep warm. Every day, a computer in the box uses a satellite telephone to send the GPS data back to Australia. It was working perfectly when we left... I hope it stays that way for the next few years!

Yesterday, our work was finished and we flew all the way back to Davis, stopping again at Mawson to drop Mick back there and refuel the plane. Late yesterday evening we were back at base, heated up leftovers from dinner, and had a good shower! It seems like a very short trip, but we worked hard all the time, and did everything we planned to.

This summer's field work is going well!

Already preparing for the next field trip,

Dan

05 January 2007

The Bunger Hills

Finally, we've started our work!

Last week I was in the Bunger Hills, an area of rocky hills not covered by snow or ice, about 20 km across. It's one of the largest ice-free areas in Antarctica, so it's called an 'oasis', where there are some lakes and a few mosses growing on land. It's between two of Australia's stations: about 1000 km east of Davis, and 500 km west of Casey. I'll try to post a map soon, with all these places. Not many people visit there, but the AAD has four small fibreglass huts, which they call "Edgeworth David Base", where we stayed.

We flew there in a CASA aircraft, with all our gear and several hundred kilograms of science equipment, and landed on a frozen lake in front of the base.

I call it a lake, because it's fresh water underneath the ice, but one side of the lake is a glacier, which is floating on the sea. The glacier goes up and down with the tide, and so does the lake, and the ice on top. So to walk from the plane to the huts on land, we had to cross the 'tide crack', where the ice moves against the land. Not difficult or dangerous, but there are some pools of water where you could get your feet wet. You can see it in the picture below.

Bunger Hills

At the left of this photo you can see the frozen lake, and the CASA plane that took us to the Bunger Hills. Between the plane and the land, you can see the 'tide crack' On land, you can see the four small huts (called 'apples') of Edgeworth David Base, and then on the right is the GPS equipment that Nick and I installed. You can see the solar panels, and the wind generator, which we hope will power the instrument all through winter.

Photo credit: Dan Colbourne (CASA pilot).

There were five of us working there: Nick and I were installing surveying equipment, Pat and Krystyna were collecting moss samples, and Mel is a "Field Training Officer" who works for the AAD, and was there to make sure everything was done safely.

Ill be working with Nick for the next couple of months. He's from Geoscience Australia, and I'm from the ANU, but we do similar work, so it makes sense to cooperate for the field work. In the Bunger Hills we installed an instrument for GA, and the next place will be for ANU. Nick is also keeping a blog about his trip to Antarctica.

We installed a GPS receiver, which we hope will operate there continuously, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, for several years.

Like the GPS some people use bushwalking, or in their car, this one uses signals from satellites to measure its position on the ground. But it's more precise than normal GPS's: with a normal one, you can get your location accurate to about 10 m. That's good enough for walking or driving, but we need better accuracy: this one can give us the location to within 1 cm!

With that precision, we can study the movement of the Earth's tectonic plates, and also how Antarctica moves because of changes in the amount of ice there. That is my main interest here, and I'll write more about it later.

The GPS receiver is powered by six big batteries (like car batteries, but special ones for the cold), which are charged by solar panels in the summer, and a wind generator in the winter (when there isn't any Sun). It sends the measurements back to Australia by Iridium satellite telephone.

We celebrated Christmas while we were there: we had a few decorations in the hut, cooked a huge meal, and opened presents from home. A Perfect Antarctic Christmas!

Merry Christmas,

Dan

29 November 2006

How I first got to the pole

I studied geology at university, because I liked science and also being outdoors. After three years of university, I had the chance to spend a summer in Antarctica, helping another geologist and doing my own project too. I loved it!

That was seventeen years ago, and since then I've spent eight seasons working there on several different research projects, and with expeditions from several countries.

A few months ago, I started a new job at the Australian National University, in Canberra. They have been working on an Antarctic project since 1999, and this year I'll go south to do the 'field work' part of the research.

Dan