Permafrost
Fairbanks, Alaska, January 31, 2012--- Permafrost is an underground phenomena but three new videos, with beautiful footage and photos, allow you to see permafrost with your own eyes.
University of Alaska-Fairbanks scientists Vladimir Romanovsky, Sergey Marchenko, and Ronald Daanen describe permafrost in videos “It’s a Bore Hole”, “The Permafrost Tilted House” and “Permafrost Patterns”.
We should get to know more about permafrost; it will be with us for a while. “To completely kill permafrost even in interior Alaska will take hundreds and hundreds of years, yet active degradation of permafrost will have immediate impacts,” said Dr Romanovsky, professor with the Permafrost Lab in the Geophysical Institute.
A dramatic example of permafrost influence is revealed in “The Permafrost Tilted House”. This videos shows how practical solutions helped right the precarious situation for the home of Ruth Macchioni and her family living over permafrost.
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Dog Mushing
“One Mean Dance Partner: How Mother Nature Twirls the Sport of Dog Mushing”
People throughout the states complain about their winter, but few can photograph a thermometer frozen at 60 degrees below Fahrenheit in their back yard like the one captured in Alaska by Jeff King, four-time Iditerod Champion.
In “One Mean Dance Partner: How Mother Nature Twirls the Sport of Dog Mushing”, Kristin Knight Pace writes how dog mushers respond to 100 degree temperature changes occuring in as little as 9 days. Anchorage National Weather Service meteorologist, John Papineau explains the extreme weather detailed in the Blog.
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FLOPS
Why FLOP’s may help us better understand permafrost and weather.
“Computational Science is a primary means of discovery in the world today. It’s a way of making our manufacturing processes more efficient, of better understanding the world we live in and of doing all types of data analysis for all types of purposes,” said Greg Newby, director of the Arctic Region Supercomputing Center.
In a new series of videos Newby and Per Nyberg, from Cray Inc., reveal how computational science uses a crucial tool, the supercomputer, and how FLOPS, (floating point operations) are a key measure of supercomputing speed.
Since the April 2011 web launch, Frontier Scientists continues to share first person accounts and real time insights from leading archaeologists, grizzly bear biologists, volcano researchers, climate change specialists and other scientists.
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Suggested tags
#Alaska, #videos, #permafrost, #mushing, #dogmushing, #supercomputing
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New permafrost videos at www.frontierscientists.com. New Blog about weather and dog mushing, New video about supercomputers and FLOPs.
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Contact
Elizabeth O’Connell
WonderVisions
Ph 541.312.2419
liz@frontierscientists.com
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