News from the polar regions in November 2008 included many climate change-related reports, the fifth largest ozone hole on record, new marine discoveries, and new polar research projects. Missed these stories the first time? Read on!
Is the winter thinning of Arctic sea ice driving the summer record lows? That’s the question many scientists are asking. […]
Archive for November, 2008
Polar News & Notes: November 2008 News Roundup
Sunday, November 30th, 2008 9:00 am
Written by: Jessica Fries-Gaither
Scientists Discover New Penguin Species…But It’s Extinct
Thursday, November 27th, 2008 9:00 am
Written by: Jessica Fries-Gaither
Scientists studying the rare yellow-eyed penguin (Megadyptes antipodes), an endangered species found in New Zealand, made a surprising discovery: a new penguin species. The only catch? It’s extinct.
Researchers used genetic analysis as well as morphological evidence from bones and discovered that the oldest specimens were different enough to represent a new species (Megadyptes waitaha). They theorize […]
Posted in Topics: Animals, Current News, Polar News & Notes
IPY Day in December Celebrates Research on Polar Weather from All Angles
Tuesday, November 25th, 2008 5:12 pm
Written by: Carolyn Hamilton
December 4 will be the seventh International Polar Day and the focus is on modern-day research taking place at both poles. With the theme Above the Polar Regions, background information and activities will feature polar meteorology, atmospheric sciences, astronomy, and polar observations from space.
Teachers and others are invited to use resources from the Above the […]
Thousands of Underwater Species Identified, Many from the Polar Regions
Tuesday, November 25th, 2008 12:34 pm
Written by: Carolyn Hamilton
The World Conference on Marine Biodiversity, meeting in Valencia, Spain, in mid-November, received the fourth report on the Census of Marine Life, which is being compiled by 2,000 scientists from 82 nations. It will be officially released in October 2010.
This report revealed some amazing new findings about life in the ocean depths. In a […]
Posted in Topics: Animals, Antarctica, Arctic, Current News, International Polar Year, Oceans, Polar News & Notes, Science
Counting and Naming Every Glacier in Iceland
Tuesday, November 25th, 2008 12:22 pm
Written by: Carolyn Hamilton
Iceland has 109 outlet glaciers, 73 mountain glaciers, five valley glaciers and 21 surge-type glaciers, plus 55 cirque glaciers, ice caps and snow patches—and all have been counted and named. In a country about the size of the state of Virginia, residents have been observing and documenting their wealth of glaciers for centuries.
The glaciers’ […]
Posted in Topics: Science







Posted in Topics: Antarctica, Arctic, International Polar Year, Monthly News Roundup, Polar News & Notes
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