The Wanderer – August to September 2022 issue is out

The Wanderer – August to September 2022 issue is out

The 79th Marion Island Overwintering team has compiled their 3rd newsletter, filled with interesting stories and fascinating photography!

In this edition:

  • Meet the Diesel Mechanic, Ecologist and Medical Orderly of the team
  • Marion’s Marvelous Birds – Grey Petrels
  • Fashionable Field Gear
  • Memorable Shots
  • Sealer Diaries
  • The Mouse-Free Marion Project
  • Island Life
  • Celebrations – August and September Birthdays
  • Sports’ Time
  • A Typical Day – from a Sealer’s point of view
  • The Team – what have we been up to?
  • A Time to Explore
  • Song Pick for August
  • Circle of Life – Breeding Season is in the Air
  • Weather for the Brave

The Wanderer – August to September 2022 Edition

Check out all this team’s newsletter on the Antarctic Legacy of South Africa Archive here

 

Anche Louw, Antarctic Legacy of South Africa, 15 November 2022

 

World Science Day for Peace and Development 2022

World Science Day for Peace and Development 2022

World Science Day for Peace and Development is coordinated each year by UNESCO on 10 November. 

The theme of World Science Day for Peace and Development is Basic Sciences for Sustainable Development. This day is being celebrated within the International Year of Basic Sciences for Sustainable Development, which kicked off on 8 July 2022 (UNESCO).

World Science Day for Peace and Development aims to build a bridge between science and society. This should be an encouragement to all scientific programmes to create an open line for communication between scientists and the public. The public needs to be informed about polar research as the polar regions are extremely important and connected to the rest of the planet. The polar regions are essential for the health and future of the fantastic planet earth” (European Polar Board Executive Secretary, Dr Renuka Badhe). 

Keep an eye out for more information on the Antarctic Season Launch 2022 – providing a platform for discussions between the SANAP scientific community and the public.  

Scientific projects within the South African National Antarctic Programme (SANAP) are based on basic sciences (Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, and Biology). Below we point out some of these scientific projects funded by the National Research Foundation (SANAP-Funding).     

World Science Day for Peace and Development 2022

See below a list of all the research projects funded by the NRF-SANAP. These projects will be funded until the end of 2023.

Researchers previously involved in SANAP and those new to Antarctic research from universities not previously involved in SANAP are encouraged to put in a project proposal once the new cycle for applications opened. 

View the current NRF-SANAP projects and previous NRF-SANAP projects here.

Anche Louw, Antarctic Legacy of South Africa, 10 November 2022.

Job Advertisement: SAPRI Senior Electronics Technician

Job Advertisement: SAPRI Senior Electronics Technician

SAPRI JOBS

As per job advertisement:

The South African Environmental Observation Network (SAEON) is a research platform funded by the Department of Science and Innovation (DSI) and managed by the National Research Foundation (NRF).
SAEON is mandated to establish and manage long-term environmental observatories; maintain reliable long-term environmental data sets; promote access to data for research and/or informed decision making; and contribute to capacity building.

This position is supported by the Department of Science and Innovation’s South African Polar Research Infrastructure (SAPRI) programme and will be based in Cape Town.

A Senior Electronics Technician to provide technical and logistic support for the SAPRI programme’s various research and long-term monitoring activities in the offshore marine and Southern Ocean, sub-Antarctic Islands and Antarctica, conducted onboard South African and international research vessels.

Application Closing Date: 16 November 2022

Click here to view the position advert.

Read more about SAPRI:

South African Polar Research Infrastructure (SAPRI): Feedback and start of the Preparatory Phase

 

Anche Louw, Antarctic Legacy of South Africa

Open Access: Prince Edward Islands Geospatial Database

Open Access: Prince Edward Islands Geospatial Database

In a new publication, An open access geospatial database for the sub-Antarctic Prince Edward Islands, by Elizabeth Rudolph, David William Hedding, Nico de Bruyn, and Werner Nel, open access is given to a geospatial database for both Marion Island and Prince Edward Island.

Click here to view the full suite of data: Prince Edward Islands Geospatial Database

This paper was presented at the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research Open Science Conference 2022, in a poster format. Click here to view the poster.

Authors:

 

Anche Louw, Antarctic Legacy of South Africa, 06 October 2022

SCAR Open Science Conference 2022

SCAR Open Science Conference 2022

“SCAR’s mission is to advance Antarctic research, including observations from Antarctica, and to promote scientific knowledge, understanding and education on any aspect of the Antarctic region.  To this end, SCAR is charged with the initiation and international co-ordination of Antarctic and Southern Ocean research beneficial to global society.  One of the most effective ways to do this is to bring researchers together to share their latest results, discuss new ideas, and provide opportunities to develop new projects” – www.scar.org

SCAR expanded its biennial business meetings to include an Open Science Conference (OSC).  This year’s open science conference was held from 1 – 10 August 2022, hosted by India. It made it possible for participants and attendees to discuss current results and develop future projects. The conference included plenary, parallel and satellite events, as well as workshops. Business meetings of the science groups were held before the open science conference.

South Africans participated and attended various sessions during the conference (see details below):

  • Keynote speaker Katye Altieri: “Stable isotopes as a tracer of reactive nitrogen emissions and aerosol formation in the Southern Ocean”.(link)
  • Bettine van Vuuren chaired a mini-symposium. 
  • Christel Hansen, Mia Wege, Geoff Grantham, and Charne Lavery were session convenors.
  • The business meetings were attended by Bettine van Vuuren, Sarah Fawcett, Ria Olivier, Christel Hansen, Anche Louw, Charney Lavery, Geoff Grantham, Thulani Makhalanyane and Werner Nel.

Presentations delivered:

  • Geoff Grantham: The Age And Chemistry Of Granitic Gneisses From The Western H.U.Sverdrupfjella, Maud Terrane, Western Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica. (link)
  • Ria Olivier: Digging into the Past; An archive as a tool to compile and establish a timeline of human impact in our polar heritage (link); Collaboration of South African Researchers in an Extreme Cold Environment. (link)
  • Marcel du Plessis: Insights from the SO-CHIC Expedition: what have we done and where are we now? (link)
  • Morgan Raath-Krüger: Do Anisotropic Processes Influence Fine-Scale Spatial GeneticStructure Of A Keystone Sub-Antarctic Plant Species? (link)
  • Charne Lavery: Antarctica, Africa and the Arts (link)
  • Adrienne van Eeden Wharton: On Aftermaths and Afterlives, Afterimages and Aftersounds: Mourning-As-Witnessing Ecological Destruction in the SouthernOcean/S
  • Daniela Monsanto:  Landscape Genetics Of A Springtail Endemic To Marion Island (link)
  • Sophie Kohler: Ice in the Southern Imagination (link)
  • Pedro Lebre: Uncovering The Unexplored: The Microbial Ecology Of Sub-AntarcticIsland Soils (link)

E-Posters:

  • Liezel Rudolph: A geospatial database for the sub-Antarctic Prince Edward Islands (link)
  • Geoff Grantham: The Kuunga Accretionary Complex of Sverdrupfjella, western Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica (link)
  • Shilpa Parbhu: Understanding how an invasive springtail adapted to cold sub-Antarctic Marion Island (link)
  • Trevor McIntyre: The ontogeny of southern elephant seal foraging migration strategies: finding their way as they go (link)

Antarctic Legacy of South Africa communicated South Africa’s participation and conference-related announcements on Twitter (47 Tweets). A highlight was the session on the discovery of Shackleton’s Endurance, where South Africa was frequently mentioned during the talk.

What is to come:

  • SCAR Delegates Meeting (5-7 September 2022)
    • All the best to Bettine van Vuuren and Tracy Klarenbeek attending as SA representatives.

 

All posters and presentations can be found on the ALSA digital archive.

The conference virtual site is still available – if you have missed out on any sessions you can listen to the recordings, and all abstracts and posters can still be downloaded.

 

Ria Olivier, Antarctic Legacy of South Africa, 17 August 2022.

© South African National Antarctic Programme • Managed and administered by Antarctic Legacy of South Africa • Photo Credits