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#Antarctica station
fullmetalfisting · 6 months
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Forgot to post my March reads so here
Infinity Son by Adam Silvera ⭐⭐⭐
How Can I Help You by Laura Sims ⭐⭐
The Will of the Many by James Islington (read twice) ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
The Prisoner’s Throne by Holly Black ⭐⭐⭐⭐
The Other Lola by Ripley Jones ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Bad Like Us by Gabriella Lepore ⭐⭐
Listen for the Lie by Amy Tintera ⭐⭐⭐⭐
The Resort by Sara Ochs ⭐⭐⭐
Hate Mail by Donna Marchetti ⭐⭐⭐
Antarctica Station by A.G. Riddle ⭐⭐
Lion’s Legacy by Lev A.C. Rosen ⭐⭐⭐
A Fate Inked in Blood by Danielle L. Jensen ⭐⭐⭐
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grlbts · 2 years
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Halley VI Antarctic Research Station
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grainelevator · 8 months
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The aeolian processes of katabatic winds in Antarctica’s McMurdo Dry Valleys shape boulders into surreal formations
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mapsontheweb · 4 months
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European countries with research station on Antarctica
by geo.facts_
Out of the 29 countries with stations in the Antarctic continent, 16 of them are located in Europe and out of these 16 countries, 9 of them have more than two stations! Germany🇩🇪, Russia🇷🇺 and the United Kingdom🇬🇧 all have 5 stations on the continent, some of them working only during summer while others are permanently open.
As mentioned, some stations work only during summer, while others work all year long - meaning that the population of performing scientists and researchers varies from approximately 4.000 people during summer and only 1.000 during winter times (June to August).
Apart from that, there are several stations that don’t belong to any country, in other words, it means that they receive scientists from all over the world!
Fun fact: The coldest temperature ever registered on earth was at the Antarctic continent. In July 21 of 1983, at the Russian Vostok station, the thermometers recorded a temperature of -82.2C° (-115F°)
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dontforgetukraine · 1 month
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Ukrainian polar explorers managed to record a unique aurora australis. It is extremely rare to see it near our "Vernadskyi". Why? First, this area is located quite far from the South Magnetic Pole of the Earth. Secondly, it is always very cloudy here
Source: National Antarctic Scientific Center
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sitting-on-me-bum · 11 months
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Crabeater seal at Palmer Station
A crabeater seal lounging at Palmer Station, Antarctica. Despite their name, crabeater seals only eat Antarctic krill and use their specially shaped teeth to filter out the seawater.
Credit: Mike Lucibella/NSF
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soviet-amateurs · 5 months
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On the night of April 29-30, 1961, a member of the 6th Soviet Antarctic Expedition, the 27-year-old doctor Leonid Rogozov, successfully performed an appendectomy on himself in the Antarctic Novolazarevskaya station - a surgery to remove an inflamed appendix.
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tealin · 1 year
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McMurdo Internet
Internet service is supplied to Antarctica via a geostationary satellite. This far south, the satellite is only a few degrees above the horizon, and unfortunately for McMurdo, it's behind Mt Erebus. So the signal is beamed to a receiver on Black Island, about 20 miles away to the southwest, and bounced over to the sheltered alcove at the end of the Hut Point Peninsula where McMurdo sits.
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The Chalet, administrative hub, with Black Island in the distance
The Black Island telecommunications infrastructure was installed in the 1980s, long before the internet we know and love today. It was upgraded in 2010 to allow more data transfer, mainly realtime weather data to feed into global forecast models. For this reason, it's probably the only place I've ever been where upload speed is remarkably faster than download speed – 60Mbps for outbound traffic, but only 20Mbps for inbound. Most regular internet use is receiving, not sending, so that's an entire base running on a connection that's only marginally faster than the average American smartphone. As you can imagine, this is somewhat limiting.
The limits to one's internet access actually begin before one even reaches the Ice. At the orientation in Christchurch, one is directed to a URL from which one must download and install a security programme from the U.S. government. It may feel like a hippie commune full of nerds, but McMurdo is an installation of the American state, and as such its computer network is a target of whatever disgruntled conspiracy theorist decides to hack The Man on any given day. Computers that are allowed onto this network (such as the one on which I am typing right now) have to have an approved firewall and antivirus service installed, then this extra programme on top of them. I am not sure what it does. For all I know the CIA is spying on me even now. (Hi, guys!) But you need to install it to get on the McMurdo Internet, such as it is, so I did.
To be honest, I was rather looking forward to a month cut off entirely from the hyperconnected world, so I was a tiny bit disappointed that quite a lot of day-to-day communication is done by email, and I would need to be on my computer a fair bit to get it. Had I known just how important email would be, I'd have installed an email client that actually downloads one's messages instead of just fetching them; as it was, the cycle of loading an email and sending the reply, even in Gmail's "HTML for slow connections" mode, took about five minutes, not counting the time it took to write. Tending one's email was a serious time commitment; sometimes I felt like I was spending more time on the computer in Antarctica than I did at home.
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Crary scientists waiting, and waiting, and waiting
In a way, though, I was lucky, because I was technically a scientist and therefore had access to the one building on base with WiFi, the Crary Lab. And don't think you can just waltz into Crary with your laptop and poach the WiFi – in order to access it at all, you have to get set up by Crary IT with your own personal WiFi login. If you do not have Crary access, your portal to the Internet is one of a handful of ethernet cables in each of the dorm common rooms, or some public terminals in the main building. You can hop on, download your emails, maybe check the news or Google something you needed to look up, and then leave it for someone else. When most online time sinks are either blocked or too heavy to load, it’s amazing how little internet time you actually turn out to need.
Things that we have come to take for granted in The World are not a part of McMurdo life. Social media is pretty much out – the main platforms are bandwidth hogs even before you try to load a video or an animated GIF. There is no sharing of YouTube links, and no Netflix and chill. Someone was once sent home mid-season for trying to download a movie. Video calls with family and friends? Forget it. People do occasionally do video calls from Antarctica, often to media outlets or schools, but these have to be booked in advance so as to have the requisite bandwidth reserved. Jumping on FaceTime does not happen – not least because handheld devices have to be in airplane mode at all times for security reasons. Your phone might be secure enough for your internet banking, but not for US government internet!
It is, unavoidably, still a digital environment, it just gets by largely without internet access. Nearly everyone has an external hard drive, mostly for media that they've brought down to fill their off hours. If you want to share files you just swap hard drives, or hand over a memory stick. When the Antarctic Heritage Trust wanted some book material from me, I dropped it onto an SD card and ran it over to Scott Base on foot – a droll juxtaposition of high- and low-tech, not to mention a good excuse for a hike over The Gap on a beautiful day. It took half an hour, but was still faster than emailing it.
There is also a McMurdo Intranet, which includes a server for file sharing. Emailing someone your photos will take ages, but popping them into a folder on the I: drive and sending them a note to say you've done so (or, better yet, phoning them, or poking your head into their office) is much more efficient. To conserve space, this informal server partition is wiped every week, so you have to be quick about it, but it's an effective workaround, and also a good way to get relatively heavy resources to a large number of people in one go.
The telecommunications centre on Black Island is mostly automated, but like anything – perhaps more than some things, given the conditions – it needs to be maintained. There is a small hut out there for an equally small team of electricians and IT engineers; Black Island duty attracts the sort of person who might have been a lighthouse keeper back in the day.
Towards the end of my time on the Ice there was a spell where they needed to shut off the connection overnight, to do some necessary work. Given that most people's workdays extended at least to the shutoff time at 5:30 p.m., this meant essentially no internet for a large portion of the population, and some amusing flyers were posted up to notify everyone of the impending hardship.
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Someday, faster, more accessible internet will come to Antarctica.  It's more or less unavoidable, as communications technology improves, and everyone's work – especially the scientists' – depends more and more on having a broadband connection at all times.  It will make a lot of things more convenient, and will make the long separation from friends and family much easier.  But I'm pretty sure that many more people will mourn the upgrade than celebrate it.  One can, theoretically, curtail one's internet use whenever one likes, but even before the pandemic it was almost impossible to live this way with the demands of modern life: I know from personal experience that opting out of Facebook alone can have a real detrimental effect on relationships, even with people one sees in the flesh fairly regularly, simply because everyone assumes that is how everyone else communicates.  Being in a community where no one has access to assumed channels, and is more or less cut off from the rest of the world in a pocket universe of its own, levels the playing field and brings a certain unity.  The planned (and, unarguably, necessary) updating of the physical infrastructure of McMurdo will wipe out a lot of the improvised, make-do-and-mend character of the place; how much would free and easy access to the online world change it in a less tangible way?
I'm sure the genuine Antarctic old-timers would shake their heads at the phone and email connections we have now, and say that no, this has already ruined Antarctica.  It's not Antarctica unless your only link to the outside world is a dodgy radio.  It's not Antarctica unless you only get mail once a year when the relief ship arrives.  Doubtless the shiny new McMurdo will be seen as 'the good old days' by someone, someday, too.  Change may happen slower there than elsewhere, but just like the rust on the tins at Cape Evans, it comes eventually, regardless. 
For my own part, I'm glad I got to see 'old' McMurdo, such as it was, all plywood and cheap '90s prefab.  The update will be much more efficient, and tidy, but yet another generation removed from the raw experience of the old explorers.  My generation is probably the last to remember clearly what life was like before ubiquitous broadband; to some extent, Antarctica is a sort of time capsule of that world, just as the huts are a time capsule of Edwardian frontier life.  I hope they'll find a way to hang on to the positive aspects of that. 
Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm off to waste an hour mindlessly refreshing Twitter ...
If you'd like to learn more about the Black Island facility, there's a lot of good information (and some photos!) here: https://www.southpolestation.com/trivia/90s/blackisland.html
And this Antarctic Sunarticle goes into greater depth on the 2010 upgrade: https://antarcticsun.usap.gov/features/2114/
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retropopcult · 10 months
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Keith David as "Childs" in The Thing (1982)
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venusimleder · 9 months
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McMurdo Station, Antarctica, 2007.
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kvetch19 · 24 days
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✯ Round 1 ✯ Match 112 ✯
The current flag of Łańcut, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, Poland
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Propaganda:
None
vs.
The current flag of Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station, Antarctica
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Propaganda:
None
Tournament Policies: ✯ Choose the flag that's more meaningful to you! ✯ Be respectful of place names and cultural symbols in your commentary! ✯ If you want to submit propaganda, you may do so at the submission form linked in the pinned post. It will only be included if it is submitted before the next post with that flag is drafted and will be included in all subsequent posts the flag is featured in.
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dreamerinsilico · 8 months
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Interactions with humans today have made me want to do some more involved Left Hand of Darkness fic than what I wrote for Yuletide 2022.
I live in a warm climate that's getting obnoxiously warmer, US Southeast.
When it does snow (or I go somewhere with snow) I will quite literally roll in it like a kid. I love snowsky. I love the feathery ice-kiss on my skin. (I don't much like trying to traverse surprise powder on skis, but hey.) I love the cold air that sears through my skull and shuts the brain weasels up for a bit.
(Yes, I know this stuff hits differently when you live somewhere that gets down to -20 F or below. But I gleefully hung out during a Chicago blizzard the one time, which grounded my flight home, so I think I at least have a decent amount of context of what it's like where it actually gets cold.)
Anyway, point being, I love winter, it's now very much my favorite season since we don't even really have autumn anymore here. I'm finding myself curious to poke at in terms of Estraven's experience on the ice. What it's like to actually respect winter.
To cross the streams a bit, what it's like to live in The White That Wends (in Eora/Pillars of Eternity, which is my first and favorite PC's point of origin).
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mapsontheweb · 2 years
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Map of McMurdo Station, Antarctic, 1974.
By the US Geological Survey Scale 1:250,000
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dontforgetukraine · 19 days
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The National Antarctic Scientific Center's Vernadsky station observed some interesting and unusual atmospheric phenomena.
White rainbow
A halo, which can form around a sun or moon.
Mirages where it looks like icebergs and islands float above the water
Clouds filled with ice crystals that give it a pearly look.
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vivid aurora streams over the Earth as the International Space Station orbited 273 miles above the southern Indian Ocean in between Australia and Antarctica ❤️ nasa.gov/image-detail/gmt284_16_02_shane-kimbrough_1068_great-aurora
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