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Entries this day: Today bicycle iceberg Today 9:50am CDT Monday 22 April 2002 Wow. My linux box clock set itself correctly over the weekend. I wonder if it though savings time started or ended this weekend. Yesterday I went to YRUU, but no one showed up, so I studied Japanese; now I'm pretty clear on all the hiragana, except for all the ones with little quotes or circles beside them. I almost know half of those. People did show up for SNOW (Sunday Night Of Worship), at which there were several tears after stressful weekends. I hung out with Amy for some hours afterward, sharing stories, and answering some questions about her new leadership role in YRUU - local, district and continental. - - - - This morning I met with Kim Sawyer, my personal coach at Empire Cafe. Good stuff. Kim helped me reframe my work so that I am happier here, knowing that this (work) is helping me get to Japan. 12:03pm Staff meeting was not entirely boring. I've gotten 3 things done from my list since then. 1:47pm Just went outside for a walk to see the wall that's being built between the Shepherd exit ramp and the freeway. Met a guy named Alvin who said he went to jail in Louisiana, and got transferred to Houston where he was released. He's begging for money until he gets enough to go back to LA. 5:28pm Aight; I'm outta here for the day. Had a 2 hour productive project-design meeting. I think we will benefit from having these before we start big projects.
bicycle 9:25pm CDT Monday 22 April 2002 Rode my bike to I-group tonight. Zero wrecks this time; I didn't try as much wacky stuff. Cars still got in my way though. From Richmond, I rode along the inside of 610 loop once I reached it. Then under 610 along Westheimer and huge bunny hops over parking lot curbs three in a row as I sped diagonally across the parking lot. Fun. During I-group, I told them of my fear in going to Japan. I was pretty quickly able to recognize that my fear is simply of the unknown, just as I had fear around going to Paris before Bryn and I went. The Paris trip was fantastic; why should Japan be any different? That's right. It will be equally fantastic, but even more so. Rode my bike home, and from Richmond/610 interchange I rode through the 2 foot tall grass along the inside of 610 loop as it turned backwards into highway 59, and along its feeder all the way backwards to Newcastle. That was strenuous. Crossed under 59 on Newcastle and rode north along 59 feeder all the way to Shepherd. Equally strenuous and more danger from traffic. Didn't get squished though.
iceberg 22 April 2002 10,000 square kilometers is pretty big.
Date: Mon, 22 Apr 2002 14:21:28 -0400 (EDT)
From: NASANews@hq.nasa.gov
Subject: MASSIVE ICEBERGS MAY AFFECT ANTARCTIC SEA LIFE AND FOOD CHAIN
David E. Steitz
Headquarters, Washington April 22, 2002
(Phone: 202/358-1730)
Cynthia O'Carroll
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
(Phone: 301/614-5563)
Harvey Leifert
American Geophysical Union, Washington
(Phone: 202/777-7507)
Mark Shwartz
Stanford University News Service, Stanford, Calif.
(Phone: 650/723-9296)
RELEASE: 02-68
MASSIVE ICEBERGS MAY AFFECT ANTARCTIC SEA LIFE AND FOOD CHAIN
NASA-funded research using satellite data has shown
large icebergs that have broken off from Antarctica's Ross
Ice Shelf are dramatically affecting the growth of minute
plant life in the ocean around the region -- plant life vital
to the local food chain.
Scientists say the icebergs appear to have caused a 40
percent reduction in the size of the 2000-2001 plankton bloom
in one of Antarctica's most biologically productive areas.
The icebergs decrease the amount of open water that the
plants need for reproduction.
After the calving, or "breaking off," of the B-15 iceberg in
March of 2000, researchers used imagery from NASA's SeaWiFS
(Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view Sensor) satellite and data
from the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program to see the
effect that large icebergs have on phytoplankton (minute
floating plants) blooms. The B-15 iceberg that broke off the
Ross Ice Shelf and drifted into the southwestern Ross Sea was
as large as the state of Connecticut (approximately 10,000
square kilometers or 3,900 square miles)
"This is the first time that satellite imagery has been used
to document the potential for large icebergs to substantially
alter the dynamics of a marine ecosystem," said Kevin Arrigo,
a researcher at Stanford University, Stanford, Calif. Arrigo
and his colleagues are publishing their results in a paper
titled "Ecological Impact of a Large Antarctic Iceberg," in
an upcoming issue of Geophysical Research Letters.
NASA's Thorsten Markus of the Goddard Space Flight Center,
Greenbelt, Md., a co-author on the paper, noted that SeaWiFS
satellite imagery enabled researchers to see that large
icebergs such as the B-15 restricted the normal drift of pack
ice. Normally, when the winds shift, ice is carried out into
the Ross Sea, creating open ocean space and a breeding ground
for phytoplankton. The icebergs, however, created a blockage
that resulted in heavier spring/summer pack-ice cover than
previously recorded.
Since the area of sea ice was more extensive, the area
suitable for phytoplankton growth was reduced, and as a
result, so was the length of the algal growing season. Since
the B-15 iceberg was so large, plankton productivity
throughout the region was more than 40 percent below normal.
The southwestern Ross Sea is one of the most biologically
productive regions in the Southern Ocean surrounding
Antarctica. This is partly due to the large and persistent
areas of open water that form during the Antarctic spring
when pack ice drifts out of the Ross Sea.
In the springtime, winds shift in the area of the Ross Sea
and clear away sea ice, forming the Ross Sea polynya (an area
of open water surrounded by sea ice) where phytoplankton
flourish. However, when large icebergs calve, such as B-15,
sea ice is not as easily moved by winds, severely reducing
the area of open water.
Phytoplankton are a critical part of the entire ecosystem in
the Ross Sea, since they sustain marine mammals and birds in
the region. During periods where there are no large icebergs,
phytoplankton thrive, and so do those organisms that feed on
them. The region also is home to 22 percent of the world
population of circumpolar Emperor penguins and 30 percent of
Adelie penguins.
This research is a part of NASA's Earth Science Enterprise, a
long-term research effort dedicated to help us better
understand and protect our home planet.
Images and video are available at:
https://www.gsfc.nasa.gov/topstory/20020416iceberg.html
Information on SeaWiFS can be found at:
https://SeaWiFS.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEAWIFS.html
Information on icebergs is available on the National Snow and
Ice Data Center Web site at:
https://nsidc.org
-end-
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