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Sampling the Yukon River – Thoughts from our Yup’ik summer interns

8/30/2022

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Photo Credit: Maria Tzortziou
By Kiera Strongheart, 10th Grade Student
“What I liked about this job was doing something different than what most kids in the village do. It was a different experience. Plus, we did not work too long so I would not get too tired. Looking back at it now, I kind of miss it !! Working with more instruments and having one or two more students to work with, would make the experience even more interesting next summer!!!”
  - Kiera

 
By Theodore Hamilton, 12th Grade Student
“Working on the project this past summer was interesting and fun. What is interesting about the project is how the color of the filter changed from June to now. Late May and early June the color was a bit darker than July and August. Collecting water samples at the Alakanuk mouth was pretty fun for the ride and spending time outdoors…
The color of the filter after being sampled would change due to seasonal changes. Also, coastal erosion, winds, and currents could also cause changes on the sample, lol!
Working in the Lab used to be a bit difficult for the first few days because processing the samples is something me and Kiera haven’t done before. But with experience, the work became much easier.
Working and being part of the project this summer was very fun, and gave me an open mind and experience for future jobs!
   - Theo

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Gathering native testimony about environmental changes in Alakanuk

8/28/2022

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Photo Credit: Emily Raboteau and Maria Tzortziou
​I was invited by my colleague Dr. Maria Tzortziou to join her on a research trip to the Yukon Delta where her NASA-funded team is studying coastal changes due to the climate crisis. (We are being financed by an interdisciplinary research grant through City University of New York.) As a climate writer interested in environmental justice, I feel excited and fortunate to be partnering with an environmental scientist who can help me understand the larger picture of global warming and its implications for frontline communities such as here in the remote village of Alakanuk, Alaska, by sharing her scientific observations. While Maria’s team continues methodically gathering water samples and taking satellite imagery that over time have a story to tell about environmental change in the most rapidly warming part of the planet, we have come for five days to gather stories from members of the local Yup’ik community – some of them collaborators in the larger research program - about what changes they have observed in their home place, how they are adapting to these changes on sociocultural and spiritual levels, stewardship, and traditional ecological knowledge.

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Carbon Hunting in the Yukon Delta

8/11/2022

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Photo Credit: Blake Clark
Going out to the field in the Yukon River delta is always an experience, and after two years of being office bound during the pandemic it was a welcome sight to fly over and see the beautiful landscape. I think we saw over 50 moose flying below the clouds at 500 ft from Bethel. It can also be a challenging place to get to, and the trip out required 30 hours of Anne Kellerman and I waiting in Bethel to be cleared to fly with our equipment on a charter to Alakanuk. When we got in, Alyssa Burns and Peter Hernes had already been hard at work sampling the northern region of the delta. No time can be wasted when we only have 5 working days to try and get a widespread snapshot of the carbon system in this remote and dynamic region.

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Arriving in Nome, Alaska

8/5/2022

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Picture
Photos Credit: Kyle Turner, Jonathan Sherman


​We had a long but safe and successful trip to Nome, AK! Jonathan Sherman and I made it to all of our quick layovers leaving from New York City earlier this morning (but the last plane had to hold for us). We met Chelsea Lopez while boarding for Nome at the Anchorage Airport. As we landed in Nome, Scott Freeman picked us up from the airport, and the team loaded all of our supplies and instruments and headed to the ADF&G (Alaska Department of Fish and Game) bunkhouse, where we were staying in town. Our collaborator Jenefer Bell, Arctic Area Research Biologist with ADF&G, has been so helpful and supportive throughout the planning of our coastal Arctic fieldwork this summer! Our plan over the next few days is to have a 3-day trip with Captain Adem Boeckmann and his large fishing vessel Anchor Point to transect south and collect measurements across a strong marine-coastal-estuarine gradient in Norton Sound and near the Yukon River Delta. Saturday looks like our one chance at (some) sunshine, so we plan to spend Friday steaming and collect the majority of data on Saturday.
​

Meanwhile, we've been enjoying the quaint but small town of Nome. We played pool at the local saloon, Nome's oldest saloon since 1900 with an old "gold rush" facade. At that time, Nome was one of Alaska's largest cities, with people flocking to strike it rich in the golden sands. We walked the beach along Norton Sound and admired a sprawling collection of old rusted machinery from Nome's "golden era". The team assembled the optics package that will be used over the next few days to collect profiles of optical parameters, including absorption and backscattering, critical for linking in-situ measurements to satellite imagery. The weather is slightly chilly, but not too bad! I haven't had to pull out my heavy winter coat yet.

​- Kyle Turner


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