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Stories from today's explorers of the North and South about how and why the Poles affect China
Shanghai: Penguins, Polar Bears and Disappearing Ice
Saturday, October 17 - 14:00-17:00
Public presentation at the Shanghai Science and Technology Museum

Earth's Poles are the coldest, most remote, and remain the most unexplored regions on the planet. But what happens there affects weather and climate everywhere, even in such a vast nation as China, far from 90 degrees North or South. Today the Arctic and Antarctica are changing faster than anywhere else on Earth, and those changes affect all of us, both now and in the future. And in this first decade of the 21st Century, China is making major new investments in polar research in the Arctic, at sea, and deep in the heart of the Antarctic continent.

Now the Poles come to Shanghai in an exciting scientific "road show" (or "traveling science presentation.") Leading Chinese researchers join with visiting American scientists to share stories from the North and South, and showcase astonishing new discoveries. What's unique about their presentation - for audiences young and old, specialists and the general public - are their personal stories of adventure and research, supported by dramatic new high-definition video and authentic artifacts, such as the clothing worn to protect against the cold.

Presenters include:
  • Sun Bo, veteran of research expeditions to Dome A, Antarctica, one of the most extreme and challenging locations on the continent, but also an excellent site for deep ice coring and astronomy. Dr. Bo heads the Division of Polar Oceanography at the Polar Research Institute of China (PRIC.)
  • Zhaoqian Dong, was the first Chinese scientist sent to Antarctica by the Chinese government and one of the founders of the nation's Antarctic research infrastructure. He has been to Antarctica six times and has traveled once to the Arctic as chief scientist, or expedition leader. He has been researching the physical oceanography of the Southern Ocean since 1980.
  • Mary Alabert, professor of engineering at Dartmouth College, New Hampshire, and lead US scientist on the joint Norwegian-US Scientific Traverse of East Antarctica. Dr. Albert also heads the US Ice Core Drilling Program Office and leads continuing snow and ice research at Summit Station, Greenland.
  • Bob Bindschadler, glaciologist for NASA, the US space agency, and expert on using satellites to study the changing ice sheets of both Greenland and Antarctica. In 2008, he led a reconnaissance expedition to Pine Island Glacier, Antarctica, the fastest-moving glacier on the continent.
  • George Divorky, ornithologist at the Institute of Arctic Biology, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, who has been studying black guillemots on Cooper Island, AK, for more than 30 years, seeing climate change in their evolving nesting patterns.
This high-powered team of dynamic presenters will show High Definition videos of their adventures and research, and explain in memorable terms why what's happening at the Poles matters critically to China. They'll model the cold weather clothing that helps them survive, and explain where and how they live, what they eat, and why they love their work.

There'll be plenty of time for questions and answers and a chance to interact with some of Earth's most extreme explorers. (With luck, some of the younger members of the audience will be the polar explorers of the next generation!)

2009 is the 50th anniversary of the Antarctic Treaty, a landmark international agreement that has preserved the Antarctic for peaceful scientific research, and also the conclusion of the 4th International Polar Year. Come celebrate the adventure and example of polar research showing how all Earth's nations can contribute to discovery and exploration!

POLAR-PALOOZA in China is made possible by support from the Chinese Arctic and Antarctic Administration, CAA, the Polar Research Institute of China, PRIC (based in Shanghai), and by the U.S. National Science Foundation.

A POLAR-PALOOZA Presentation


Polar Palooza china Logos
Chinese Arctic and Antarctic Administration International Polar Year Chinese Antarctic Expedition National Science Foundation Polar Research Institute of China