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Home» (Page 101)

Water Fountains in the Tundra

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Jun 26, 2015   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Water Fountains in the Tundra

While tight-roping on tussock heads in a bog off the Chandalar River, two companions and I heard a waterfall. Strange. Looking through binoculars, we saw a knee-high fountain of clear water in the tundra. The flow was as thick as your leg. We squished over to investigate. The three of us had never seen water […]

The Northern Boreal Bird Nursery

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Jun 22, 2015   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

The Northern Boreal Bird Nursery

MIDDLE FORK, CHANDALAR RIVER — Two-hundred miles straight north of my home in Fairbanks, I’m at the northern edge of a forest that carpets the continent all the way to Labrador. Here for a meteorite search with an astronomer, I have helicoptered into a place humming with life. This dark spot on the nighttime map […]

Rocks from Space in Alaska Backcountry

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Jun 10, 2015   The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Rocks from Space in Alaska Backcountry

On February 26 at 1:06 p.m., someone in northern Alaska may have seen a torch of light in the cold daytime sky. On that afternoon, satellites detected a meteoric fireball headed toward Earth. An asteroid six feet in diameter penetrated the atmosphere at 13 miles per second, piercing the protective shell of gases at a […]

Denali Plants More Diverse up High

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Jun 10, 2015   The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Denali Plants More Diverse up High

When Carl Roland was hiking the high country in an Alaska national park not long ago, he thought the landscape looked different than any park in the Lower 48. The alpine zone seemed to be carpeted with more plant species than the much-larger forests and wetlands in the valleys below. When Roland looked at plant […]

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