aceas

COOKIES Blog #1 – Cook Ice Shelf research: why it’s important

Cook Ice Shelf research: why it’s important By Dr Linda Armbrecht, Australian Centre for Excellence in Antarctic Science / Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (University of Tasmania) and Joline Lalime, Sea2SchoolAU The Cook Ice Shelf sits in a remote part of East Antarctica, but it plays a major role in Earth’s climate system. Recent […]

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EB1JI do Parrinho School, Portugal (Credit F. Rosario)

COOKIES Blog #2 – Voyage to Antarctica – without leaving the classroom

Voyage to Antarctica – without leaving the classroom By Joline Lalime, Sea2SchoolAU EB1JI do Parrinho School, Portugal (Image Credit: F. Rosario) How much do you or your students know about Australia’s research vessel, the CSIRO research vessel (RV) Investigator? Why do scientists travel thousands of kilometres south to study the oceans around Antarctica? How does

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Ana Gomes, Research Fellow (back) and Dr Tristan Cordier, Senior Researcher from NORCE (Norwegian Research Centre) conducting sedaDNA sampling from a Piston Core section (Image Credit: L. Armbrecht)

COOKIES Blog #3 – What’s the big deal about sedimentary ancient DNA?

What’s the big deal about sedimentary ancient DNA? By Ana Gomes, Research Fellow, NORCE/Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research and Joline Lalime, Sea2SchoolAU Most people don’t get excited about mud – but for us, there is nothing more satisfying than a long, continuous, and well-preserved sediment core. What looks like ordinary mud is actually a layered

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RV Investigator’s Track, COOKIES Voyage to date

COOKIES Blog #4 – Listening to the deep: how sound maps the seabed

Listening to the deep: how sound maps the seabed By Laura De Santis, Senior Scientist (National Institute of Oceanography and Applied Geophysics OGS, Trieste, Italy) and Joline Lalime, Sea2SchoolAU The seafloor in the region surrounding the Antarctic continent is not flat and uninteresting; rather, it is characterised by distinctive bedforms – wave-like features made of

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COOKIES Blog #5 – The longest story ever pulled from the seafloor on the RV Investigator

The longest story ever pulled from the seafloor on the RV Investigator By Dr Linda Armbrecht, Australian Centre for Excellence in Antarctic Science/Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (University of Tasmania) and Joline Lalime, Sea2SchoolAU Sediment lying beneath the ocean floor acts like a natural archive. Layer by layer, fine grains and pieces of rock

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New model correction improves predictions of Antarctic ice shelf melt

New model correction improves predictions of Antarctic ice shelf melt Accurately predicting how Antarctic ice shelves melt is critical for understanding future sea-level rise and global climate change. A recent study led by ACEAS PhD researcher Claire Yung from the Australian National University introduces a correction to ocean models that could significantly improve these predictions.

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COOKIES Blog #6 – International collaborative science at the edge of Antarctica

International collaborative science at the edge of Antarctica By Joline Lalime, Sea2SchoolAu and Dr Linda Armbrecht, ACEAS/IMAS (University of Tasmania) Research nearby the Cook Ice Shelf is only possible through strong international collaboration. This remote and poorly studied region of East Antarctica demands a wide range of expertise, technologies, and perspectives – and this voyage

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A CTD after it has been deployed – ready to be sampled by scientists. Each bottle/Niskin has been closed at a specific depth. Credit: Joline Lalime.

COOKIES Blog #7 – Global circulation and the humble CTD

Global circulation and the humble CTD By Izzy White, University of Southampton (England) and Joline Lalime, Sea2SchoolAU The world has five ocean basins: Pacific, Atlantic, Arctic, Indian, and Southern with the Atlantic and Pacific basins divided again into Northern and Southern parts. Figure 1: Diagram of the major ocean basins and their gyres. Source: https://oceaninfo.com/list/ocean-currents/

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Southern Ocean may store less carbon than climate models assume

Southern Ocean may store less carbon than climate models assume New research led by ACEAS PhD researcher Annika Oetjens and colleagues at the University of Tasmania reveals that the Southern Ocean may be storing less carbon than climate models assume – with important implications for future climate projections. The Southern Ocean plays an outsized role

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International Women and Girls in STEM (Photo 1). L–R (Back): Lucinda Duxbury, Rebecca Knight, Izzy White, Dr Amy Leventer, Dr Sally Lau, Gina Paroz, Amy Wells, Ella Pietraroia, Pavie Nanthasurasak. L–R (Front): Dr Fiorenza Torricella, Dr Amaranta Focardi, Talia Hawkes, Sarah Jessop, Dr Linda Armbrecht, Dr Laura De Santis, Joline Lalime, Ana Gomes. Seated: Dr Jan Strugnell, Dr Katharine Prata. Image credit: CSIRO-Kieran Sheehan.

COOKIES Blog #8 – Leading from the front: women shaping Antarctic science on the COOKIES voyage

Leading from the front: women shaping Antarctic science on the COOKIES voyage By Joline Lalime, Sea2SchoolAU and Dr Linda Armbrecht, ACEAS/IMAS (University of Tasmania) Antarctica, the Southern Ocean and marine expeditions were once territories where women were excluded by tradition, superstition (bad luck), and systemic barriers. Today, that history is being actively rewritten through leadership,

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