Mini-Observatory Keeps Eye On Arctic Sea Ice

The University of Victoria's Ocean Networks Canada (ONC) is making its first foray into the Arctic, just as the sea ice extent is setting a new record low. The observatory has been granted a five-year research license from the Nunavut Research Institute for a cabled seafloor observatory system and surface weather station in the coastal hamlet of Cambridge Bay, Nunavut. The mini-observatory, using technologies developed by UVic's VENUS and NEPTUNE Canada networks, intends to provide year-round, near real-time undersea monitoring of the northern environment, and to make research data available to the community for educational and other purposes.

Installation is planned for completion before the ice returns in late September. With a few more weeks left in the melt season, the sea ice hit its lowest levels over the weekend, as measured by satellite index dating back to1979.

"The significance of having continuous monitoring of the Arctic Ocean cannot be overstated," says Dr. Kate Moran, president and CEO of ONC, who led the first drilling expedition to the central Arctic Ocean in 2004 with the Ocean Drilling Program, an international joint initiative. "This specially designed scaled-down version of our seafloor networks will support longer-term science-based understanding of dramatic changes taking place in the fragile northern ecosystem-such as the historic receding of the Arctic sea ice we are seeing this year."

The ONC is the world's largest and most advanced cabled ocean observatory-made up of UVic's NEPTUNE Canada regional network and the VENUS coastal network. It is changing the way we study the oceans, providing scientific evidence on a wide range of critical issues, and developing new world-leading technologies. An initiative of UVic, the observatory is a national facility supported through funding from the governments of Canada and BC.

For more information:
Cambridge Bay Backgrounder
Arctic sea ice extent
www.oceannetworks.ca
http://venus.uvic.ca/
www.neptunecanada.ca/

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Media contacts

Virginia Keast (Ocean Networks Canada) at 250-853-3538 or vkeast@uvic.ca

Mitch Wright (UVic Communications) at 250-721-6139 or mwwright@uvic.ca

In this story

Keywords: Ocean Networks Canada, oceans, environment

People: Kate Moran


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