International Polar Year, or IPY (2007-2009) is by far the most exciting international scientific and educational opportunity of this century. For the next two years, all eyes will be focused on the physical, social and human dimensions of our planet's polar regions. Watch this blog for news related to Canadian outreach and education efforts related to IPY. Of particular interest to educators! Note: This blog is created independently of any official IPY organization

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Free TeleWebcast LIVE FROM ANTARCTICA!

Antarctica: Life on the Ice” (Travelers’ Tales) Book Tour Free TeleWebcast with Susan Fox Rogers (Editor) and Contributors LIVE FROM ANTARCTICA! Date: Thursday, December 13th Time: 5pm PST / 8pm EST To Register, go to: www.SusanFoxRogersBookTour.com

Take this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to put your questions about this fascinating, forbidden place to Susan Fox Rogers, Editor of “Antarctica: Life on the Ice” (Travelers’ Tales, 2007) and several of the book's contributors including researcher Katy Jensen, and former representative from the National Science Foundation, Guy Guthridge, as well as penguinologist David Ainley, and IT expert Karen Joyce who will be joining us LIVE FROM ANTARCTICA. Register Now to be a part of this free TeleWebcast at: www.SusanFoxRogersBookTour.com (Feel free to pass this on to a few friends, family members or colleagues) “Antarctica: Life on the Ice” (Travelers’ Tales, 2007) is a collection of riveting stories written by scientists, professional writers and other individuals who tell their tales about what it’s like to live and work on the Ice. “Antarctica” has been selected for inclusion for the Polar Project through IPY, The International Polar Year program which focuses on the Arctic and the Antarctic from March 2007 to March 2009. SUSAN FOX ROGERS’S lifelong fascination with Antarctica began during her childhood as she listened to her father’s stories about the South Pole. Rogers has read nearly everything about Antarctica, and she finally had her chance to live and work on the Ice when she spent six weeks at McMurdo Station as part of The National Science Foundation’s Antarctic Artists and Writers Program. Learn more about Susan Fox Rogers and her work at http://www.SusanFoxRogers.com. Penguinologist, DAVID AINLEY, has made at least 28 trips to Antarctica to study the fate of the Adelie penguins. He will be calling in from Cape Royds. KAREN JOYCE, one of the funniest storytellers on the Ice, has spent sixteen seasons in Antarctica and seems to know just about everything that has and is occurring on the Ice. She will be calling in from McMurdo Station. KATY JENSEN, a scientist sent by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to monitor things that might affect the Earth’s atmosphere, has spent more than four years on the Ice, including three winters at the South Pole. GUY GUTHRIDGE – meet the man behind the National Science Foundation’s Artists and Writers Program. Join us for this rare opportunity. Register at: www.SusanFoxRogersBookTour.com By the way, “Antarctica: Life on the Ice” would be a great gift for yourself and your adventurous friends. Buy a couple of books when you register or while you’re participating in this great TeleWebcast!

Thursday, December 6, 2007

IPY Report: December 2007

Apologies for cross-posting.
IPY Report: December 2007
From: IPY International Programme Office
To: IPY Project Coordinators
cc: IPY Community Google Groups
This message can also be viewed on the web at:
Contents:
1. IPY Science Day: Ice Sheets, December 13th 2007
2. AGU
3. Data Coordinators
4. IPO in December
5. IPY Events and Conferences
6. Logos and Clothing
7. Two recent meetings
8. Blog on IPY.org
1. IPY Science Day: Ice Sheets, December 13th 2007
December 13th marks the second IPY Science Day, focussing on Ice Sheets. You can find information from more than 20 IPY Projects researching various aspects of Ice Sheets on ipy.org, as well as an educational flier, in 16 languages, and information for teachers and media. Show your involvement in IPY by launching a virtual balloon on this day!
2. American Geophysical Union meeting, 10 to 14 December 2007
IPY will have a large presence at AGU, with Union and Section science and education sessions, town meetings, and countless side meetings. We hope to display a list of daily IPY-related events at the IPY exhibit. We will also have copies of the new LIMA poster - arrive early to get one. If you have time to 'work' at the IPY exhibit, for even an hour or two, please let us know - we need assistance. IPO thanks the USA NSF Office of Polar Programs for their support of and partnership in the IPY exhibit.
3. Data Coordinators
We hear of recent efforts in two IPY nations to establish national data coordinators. We see those appointments as extremely helpful in the overall IPY data and information effort. Encouraging rapid and free data exchange and ensuring reliable and accessible long-term data archives remain our most important tasks. The IPY DIS web site (http://ipydis.org/index.html, or link from ipy.org) provides many resources for IPY researches and project coordinators. Leaders of the IPY DIS effort will provide an information and help service at AGU, from the IPY exhibit.
4. IPO in December
Kathy Salisbury will cover many of Nicola Munro's duties as IPY IPO Administrator while Nicola works in Antarctica. The IPO will close from December 24th- January 4th. For urgent enquiries, please contact Dave Carlson (ipy.djc@gmail.com) or Rhian Salmon (ipy.ras@gmail.com) directly during this time.
5. IPY Events and Conferences
At this point, planning proceeds for two IPY-endorsed conferences:
A Mid-IPY Science Conference, as part of the SCAR / IASC Open Science Conference in St Petersburg in July 2008; and
An IPY Early Science Conference in Oslo in May 2010.
Canada has proposed to host an IPY Science and Policy conference for 2012 (see the November report) and the IPY youth and early career organization, APECS, works to convene an international youth-focussed IPY Polar Discovery Conference in 2009.
6. Logos and IPY Clothing
We assume that every recipient of this report knows the familiar circular IPY logo. Did you know, however, that the IPY logo comes in several variants, modified to express the enthusiasms of a particular group or country? We hope to display these versions of the logo on ipy.org. Please see two interesting versions at: http://www.ipy.org/index.php?ipy/detail/ipy_logo/. Please send us your versions.
You may also have seen, on ipy.org, the IPY logo on a very nice polar parka (see http://www.ipy.org/index.php?/ipy/detail/on_their_way_to_antarctica/). The manufacturer of those parkas ('Made the North, for the North') offers a very nice product at a very substantial discount to all IPY participants. Please see the details and links on that page.
7. Recent meetings
Heads of Arctic and Antarctic IPY Secretariats (HAIS) met 5-6 November at the Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute (AARI) in St. Petersburg, Russia. HAIS members play key roles in implementing IPY in their countries. You can read draft Minutes, the agenda and written agenda contributions available at: http://classic.ipy.org/national. The HAIS recommended to involve the Arctic Council and the Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meetings in the planning of the 2012 Science and Policy Conference (see item 5, above). The HAIS visited the Eastern Arctic IPY Sub-office (the IPY EASO web site - http:/www.ipyeaso.aari.ru/ - provides useful information for everybody involved in IPY projects in the Eastern Arctic) and heard presentations by young Russian IPY scientists.
A workshop on Sustaining Arctic Observing Networks (SAON) occurred in Stockholm, Sweden 12-14 November, 2007. Along with parallel activities for the Southern Ocean and Antarctica, this initiative seeks to ensure continuation of observing systems currently in place the Arctic and to provide an international forum for pan-Arctic cooperation on issues related to data sharing and to future observing systems. A web site, http://www.arcticobserving.org, offers access to the SAON planning documents and to information about the second (Canada) and third (Finland) SAON workshops.
For more information about either of these activities, contact Dave Carlson (ipy.djc@gmail.com) or Odd Rogne (oddr@hotmail.com).
8. Blog on IPY.org
Several IPY Projects provide frequent material for blogs on IPY.org. In recent days you will have seen very interesting reports from several traverses crossing Antarctica. These Projects find blogging fun, easy, and a great way to take stories directly to the public. We receive regular enthusiastic comments from the public and from teachers especially saying how much they enjoy to read a collection of diverse stories reported almost immediately by scientists in the field. If you or your IPY Project would like to blog on IPY.org, please contact Rhian (ipy.ras@gmail.com).