Researchers head for Northwest Passage
Last Updated: Thursday, September 7, 2006 | 9:27 AM CT
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
External Links
(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window)
More than 40 scientists will spend the next two months conducting climate change research from Baffin Bay to the Beaufort Sea aboard the Canadian icebreaker Amundsen.
As part of an ongoing Arctic research program started in 2003, the researchers have just finished mapping the seabed and taking samples near Pond Inlet, along the north coast of Baffin Island.
Now the ship is headed north to the Kane Basin in Baffin Bay, near the 79th parallel.
The researchers are looking at everything from the atmosphere to life on the seabed, to contaminants and viruses, ArcticNet executive director Dr. Martin Fortier said in an interview.
They will also collect data from instruments that remain placed underwater all year around.
"We have four of those observatories or moorings in northern Baffin Bay, we have four in the western Arctic in the Amundsen Gulf-Beaufort Sea area, and we also have four of them in Hudson Bay," Fortier said.
"These are our three observatories, where we are able to collect a lot of information on ocean proprieties and change even when we're not present."
The Amundsen is scheduled to visit Resolute Bay and Kugluktuk before sailing west through the Northwest Passage to the Beaufort Sea.
It will return to Iqaluit at the end of October.
Share Tools
Latest North News Headlines
- Fort Smith, N.W.T., man charged with arson
- A 19-year-old Fort Smith man has been charged with arson in the New Year's Day fire that destroyed the town's old visitors' centre. more »
- Cambridge Bay airport runway to be widened
- The airport runway in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, will be widened to meet safety standards, says Nunavut's deputy minister for Economic Development and Transportation. more »
- Rankin Inlet gets CanNor cash for port business plan
- Rankin Inlet, Nunavut, is getting almost $28,000 from the Canadian Northern Economic Development Agency to put towards a business plan for a port. more »
- Yukoners need to change poverty perceptions, says report
- A new report on poverty in Yukon is calling for action from the territorial government. However, poverty activists are also calling for Yukoners to adjust their attitudes. more »
Top News Headlines
- Everest victim's husband says family not seeking government help
- The husband of a Toronto woman who died trying to climb Mt. Everest on Saturday says his family is not seeking government help to cover the cost of bringing his wife's body home. more »
- Employment Insurance review boards to be scrapped
- The federal government is scrapping two review boards used by people appealing decisions made about their employment insurance. more »
- Teens share bullying tales in confession booth
- Raw stories about bullying emerged when a video booth was set up inside a Quebec high school. more »
- Serial carjacker gets life term for fatal crash
- An Ontario judge was moved to tears while delivering a life prison sentence to a serial carjacker who killed a woman and injured five others after driving a stolen van into her car during a 2010 police chase. more »
- Investigation finds 3 electoral violations in N.W.T. riding
- Iqaluit man pleads guilty to drug and sex offences
- Head of Nunavut Impact Review Board not re-appointed
- Yukoners need to change poverty perceptions, says report
- Whitehorse man appeals drunk driving conviction
- N.W.T. budget calls for $74M surplus
- Hudson Bay polar bear numbers increase
- N.W.T. commissioner's goals for the territory
- Nunavut communities seek cellphone service

