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  • 1
    Publication Date: 1999-09-28
    Print ISSN: 0096-3941
    Electronic ISSN: 2324-9250
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 1990-01-01
    Description: Observations of high particulate loads on Eurasian Basin sea ice in 1987 raise questions of consequence for sediment budgets, ice melting, ice modeling and remote sensing. Biogenic and lithogenic particles were observed in concentrations high enough to color the ice surface brown over large area (greater than 15 × 15 km2) within the Siberian branch of the Transpolar Drift stream. The sediment is most likely incorporated when ice forms on the Siberian shelf seas, and is concentrated at the ice surface after several years of summer surface melting and biological growth within the Arctic basin. Much of the particle-laden multi-year ice appears to leave the Arctic basin via Fram Strait, depositing its sediment load along the axis of the East Greenland Current. To date, variation in sea-ice particle load has not been taken into consideration when modeling ice thickness or distribution for past or future environmental scenarios, with the exception of soot deposited from nuclear war. Naturally elevated surface-particle concentration may occur if there is increased deposition from long-range or coastal transport of aeolian material, increased sediment input into sea ice which is then exposed to surface melting, and/or increased biogenic productivity on the ice surface. Such conditions may have prevailed during the Younger Dryas. If particle loads become high enough to cause extensive sea-ice melting, changes may be expected in sea-ice concentration and distribution, sea-floor sedimentation rates, and oceanic productivity.
    Print ISSN: 0260-3055
    Electronic ISSN: 1727-5644
    Topics: Geography , Geosciences
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 1990-01-01
    Description: Observations of high particulate loads on Eurasian Basin sea ice in 1987 raise questions of consequence for sediment budgets, ice melting, ice modeling and remote sensing. Biogenic and lithogenic particles were observed in concentrations high enough to color the ice surface brown over large area (greater than 15 × 15 km2) within the Siberian branch of the Transpolar Drift stream. The sediment is most likely incorporated when ice forms on the Siberian shelf seas, and is concentrated at the ice surface after several years of summer surface melting and biological growth within the Arctic basin. Much of the particle-laden multi-year ice appears to leave the Arctic basin via Fram Strait, depositing its sediment load along the axis of the East Greenland Current.To date, variation in sea-ice particle load has not been taken into consideration when modeling ice thickness or distribution for past or future environmental scenarios, with the exception of soot deposited from nuclear war. Naturally elevated surface-particle concentration may occur if there is increased deposition from long-range or coastal transport of aeolian material, increased sediment input into sea ice which is then exposed to surface melting, and/or increased biogenic productivity on the ice surface. Such conditions may have prevailed during the Younger Dryas. If particle loads become high enough to cause extensive sea-ice melting, changes may be expected in sea-ice concentration and distribution, sea-floor sedimentation rates, and oceanic productivity.
    Print ISSN: 0260-3055
    Electronic ISSN: 1727-5644
    Topics: Geography , Geosciences
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: The Houston Museum of Natural Sciences is less than two miles from Rice University, a major hub on the Internet. This project links these two institutions so that NASA real-time data and imagery can flow via Rice to the Museum where it reaches the public in the form of planetarium programs, computer based interactive kiosks, and space and Earth science problem solving simulation. Through this program at least 200,000 visitors annually (including every 4th and 7th grader in the Houston Independent School District) will have direct exposure to the Earth and space research being conducted by NASA and available over the Internet. Each information conduit established between Rice University and the Houston Museum of Natural Science will become a model for public information dissemination that can be replicated nationally in museums, planetariums, Challenger Centers, and schools.
    Keywords: Social Sciences (General)
    Type: Information Infrastructure Technology and Applications (IITA) Program: Annual K-12 Workshop; 237-263; NASA-TM-10485
    Format: text
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2013-08-29
    Description: The American Geophysical Union (AGU), as a scientific organization devoted to research on the Earth and space sciences, provides current scientific information to the public on issues pertinent to geophysics. The Council of the AGU approved a position statement on Climate Change and Greenhouse Gases in December 1998. The statement, together with a short summary of the procedures that were followed in its preparation, review, and adoption were published in the February 2, 1999 issue of Eos ([AGU, 1999]. The present article reviews scientific understanding of this issue as presented in peer-reviewed publications that serves as the underlying basis of the position statement.
    Keywords: Environment Pollution
    Format: application/pdf
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