Update

Read more about the GEOTRACES expedition in an article written by Chief Scientist David Kadko in ARCUS' Witness the Arctic publication.

What Are They Doing?

Many trace elements are critical for marine life and therefore influence the functioning of ocean ecosystems and the global carbon cycle. Some trace elements are also of concern as contaminants, while others, together with a diverse array of isotopes, are used to assess modern-ocean processes and the role of the ocean in past climate change. Despite the recognised importance of trace elements and isotopes in the ocean, our ability to exploit knowledge of their attributes is limited by uncertainty about their sources, sinks, internal cycling and chemical speciation. GEOTRACES now fills this critical gap with knowledge of the marine biogeochemical cycles of trace elements and their isotopes at an unprecedented scale. Scientists from approximately 35 nations have been involved in the programme, which is designed to study all major ocean basins over the next decade. Much more information on details of the project can be found at the GEOTRACES website.

The GEOTRACES mission is as follows:

To identify processes and quantify fluxes that control the distributions of key trace elements and isotopes in the ocean, and to establish the sensitivity of these distributions to changing environmental conditions. We will do this by sampling the water column, sediments, sinking particles, atmospheric deposition, snow, and ice.

Where Are They?

US Coast Guard Cutter Healy
US Coast Guard Cutter Healy
The research team will be working on the US Coast Guard ice-breaker, the HEALY. We will steam from Dutch Harbor, Alaska to the North Pole and back for a total of 65 days, collecting a variety of marine samples all along the way. Life on the ship will be very crowded with over 50 scientists participating, and working 24/7. The team always say about research cruises, "If you are not working or eating, then you should be sleeping!". The ship, though, will have a "CD Lounge" for watching movies and a small "coffee shop" for socializing with fellow researchers.

Latest Journals

Hey Crew- more great news from our 2015 trip to the North Pole and back! Another little wooden float boat that we deployed atop the Arctic ice pack on our way back from the pole has been recovered. (Here's the story of the float boat project: https://www.polartrec.com/expeditions/us-arctic-…
This past October, I had an amazing notification pop up in my email letting me know that I had a new comment on my 2015 US Arctic GEOTRACES expedition page. It pertained to a neat citizen science project we were supporting called Float Your Boat – click here for a synopsis: https://www.polartrec.…
The Sun makes its way across the sky low and parallel to the horizon at the North Pole TODAY’S JOURNAL: There are some pretty amazing things to see above the Arctic Circle, and I discussed many of the region’s unique aspects in various journals throughout the expedition. Some of these…
Seal's-Eye View of CTD Cast TODAY’S JOURNAL: One of the major aspects of the 2015 US Arctic GEOTRACES Expedition was to obtain water samples for various trace element and nutrient testing. The most significant tool that oceanographers use for collecting water samples from different depths…
Dates
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Location
Western Arctic Ocean, aboard the USCGC Healy
Project Funded Title
Collaborative Research: the U.S. Arctic GEOTRACES Study
Bill Schmoker - Teacher
Teacher
Centennial Middle School

Bill Schmoker is an Earth Science teacher at Centennial Middle School in Boulder, Colorado where he has taught for 23 years. Additionally, Mr. Schmoker was a PolarTREC teacher in 2010 and a National Geographic Grosvenor Teacher Fellow in 2013, works with pre-service teachers, has authored, edited, and consulted on many Earth Science Education products, and has held many leadership roles at the building and district levels throughout his career. Mr. Schmoker is also passionate about birding and bird photography, photographing over 640 species of North American birds and having his photos appear internationally in numerous books, magazines, web sites, and interpretive signage. He has been an instructor for the Denver Audubon Society, Boulder County Nature Association, The Nature Conservancy, the American Birding Association's Youth Birding Program and the Institute for Field Ornithology.

William Landing - Researcher
Researcher
Florida State University

Bill Landing is a professor in Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Science at FSU. He studies the input and cycling of trace elements in the environment, especially those trace elements that are required by phytoplankton including Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, and Cd. On the U.S. Arctic GEOTRACES research cruise, Bill will be responsible for the collection of atmospheric aerosol samples and rain (and snow) samples to measure the input of these essential trace elements to the Arctic Ocean.

US Arctic GEOTRACES Resources

There are currently no resources associated with this expedition.