Polar Profile
- Any scientist will tell you that it is with experience and exposure that opens doors to careers in marine science.
Virtual Base Camp
- 2009 Expeditions
- Completed Expeditions
- Bering Ecosystem Study: Early Spring Plankton and Benthos
- Ocean, Atmosphere, Sea Ice, and Snowpack Interactions
- Geologic Climate Research in Siberia
- Bering Ecosystem Study: Spring Plankton and Changing Ice Cover
- Prehistoric Human Response to Climate Change
- CReSIS Greenland Ice Sheet Studies
- Bering Ecosystem Study: Summer Ice-free Conditions
- Greenland Education Tour ‘09
- High Arctic Change ‘09
- Seabird Ecology in the Bering Sea
- Alaska Climate Variation ‘09
- Polar Bear Response to Sea Ice Loss
- Microorganisms in Antarctic Glacier Ice
- Antarctic Undersea ROV ‘09
- IceCube: In-ice Antarctic Telescope
- Dissolved Organic Matter in Antarctica
- CReSIS Aerial Survey of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet
- Ice Core Drilling in West Antarctica
- Completed Expeditions
- 2008 Expeditions
- Bering Ecosystem Change
- Bering Sea Benthic Studies
- Drake Passage Opening
- Greenland Atmospheric Studies
- Greenland Education Tour '08
- Arctic Tundra Dynamics '08
- Changing Tundra Landscapes
- Bering Ecosystem Study '08
- High Arctic Change '08
- Nuvuk Archaeology Studies
- Ocean Dynamics Beaufort Sea
- Kuril Islands Biocomplexity '08
- Lake Ecosystems in Antarctica
- Ancient Buried Ice in Antarctica
- Antarctic Undersea ROV '08
- Erebus Volcano Antarctica
- Oden Antarctic Expedition '08
- Measuring East Antarctic Ice Sheet Stability
- 2007 Expeditions
- Oden Antarctic Expedition '06
- SEDNA Beaufort Sea Ice
- Bering Ecosystem Study
- Greenland Snow Studies
- Bering Sea Predators
- Arctic Tundra Dynamics
- Greenland Education Tour
- Greenland Seabird Ecology
- Climate Change Svalbard
- Alaska Climate Variation
- Kuril Islands Biocomplexity
- SIMBA Antarctic Sea Ice
- Antarctic Undersea ROV
- Human Impacts in Antarctica
- Antarctic Ice Sheet Studies
- Oden Antarctic Expedition '07
- South Pole Ozone Changes
- Antarctic Weather Stations
- TREC Expeditions
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Hello Demetris,
Great question! I'm so thankful we ahve the ability to charge our laptops - it allows me to communicate with everyone and to still feel connected to home. We often discuss how the early explorers must have felt with no outside communication!
We use solar power! We have solar panels at all the field camps. With 24 hours of daylight - solar power is a great energy source! We also have generators that run on fuel if we need extra power or if the solar panels break.
It's quite an amazing little system!
Cheers,
Robin