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Home» (Page 105)

A Yearly Flood into the Gulf of Alaska

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Feb 24, 2015   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

A Yearly Flood into the Gulf of Alaska

Satellite data has confirmed that the amount of freshwater released into the Gulf of Alaska from streams and rivers in Alaska and northern Canada is about 1.5 times what the Mississippi River dumps into the Gulf of Mexico each year. That astounding flow of water is from rainfalls that soak Southeast Alaska and the south […]

Rafts of Birds Overwintering in the Bering Sea

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Feb 13, 2015   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Rafts of Birds Overwintering in the Bering Sea

Like flecks of pepper on chowder, all of the Spectacled Eiders on the planet are now gathered amid sea ice and steaming open leads in the Bering Sea. “It’s a mass of life in this desolate area,” said Matt Sexson, who once rode an icebreaker to see the winter gathering south of St. Lawrence Island. […]

The Continued Mystery of the Denali Gap

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Feb 11, 2015   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

North America’s highest mountain should be a volcano. Denali sits about 60 miles above where the Pacific Plate grinds beneath the North American plate, as do Iliamna, Redoubt and Augustine. If you draw a line from the Aleutians to volcanic features in interior Alaska, the curve goes over Denali’s summit. Like its neighbors in the […]

Digging up Augustine’s Top-Heavy Legacy

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Jan 30, 2015   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Digging up Augustine’s Top-Heavy Legacy

Augustine Volcano sits alone, a 4,000-foot pyramid on its own island in Cook Inlet. Like many volcanoes, it has a tendency to become top heavy. When gravity acts on Augustine’s oversteepened dome, rockslides spill into the ocean. A scientist recently found new evidence for an Augustine-generated tsunami from a time when Egyptian pharaohs built their […]

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