Departmental highlights from the Environmental Data Center
February 12, 2024
Amanda Young
907-474-6826
- We hired two amazing, year-round EDC technicians!
The Environmental Data Center welcomed Abby Jackson and returnee Mayra Mel茅ndez Gonz谩lez as year-round technicians. Both bring years of experience and expertise in working in cold, polar environments. -
We were the number one contributor to , a cross-institution initiative to consistently measure active layer and snow depth across the Arctic.
The EDC coordinates with the Terrestrial Multidisciplinary distributed Observatories for the Study of Arctic Connections project, or T-MOSAiC, on its myThaw program. Measurements began in 2021, and the datasets are just starting to be published online. The myThaw project uses a simple app to record the data and photos. During the first year of the project, Mel茅ndez Gonz谩lez led troubleshooting of the app along with T-MOSAiC鈥檚 scientists and programmers. Since then, Toolik Field Station has been regarded as the program鈥檚 鈥渟tellar鈥 site due to our consistent measurements and work with the myThaw team to improve the app, only feasible due to having staff at the station year-round.
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Toolik Field Station is stepping into The Virtual Field and creating 360藲 videos.
We鈥檝e been building our library of 360藲 videos and photos, now available on our website and expanded from our original . The new collection includes hiking out to the aufeis at Galbraith Lake, biking across a frozen Toolik Lake in the dead of winter, and conducting fieldwork like climbing the NEON tower or collecting mosquitos.
These videos have been both a lot of fun to create and an effective outreach tool to bring the Arctic to people who might otherwise not be able to visit the station.
To continue these efforts, Amanda Young, Mel茅ndez Gonz谩lez, and comms & DEI manager Haley Dunleavy joined , a National Science Foundation Research Coordination Network led by members of the . The network facilitates coordination between field stations and undergraduate faculty members and produces virtual teaching materials, available for all. These include and 2D that highlight field evidence of ecological processes.
We are looking forward to working with staff and research groups to develop videos and experiences to share with the world at large. If you have any video ideas or would like to join our efforts, reach out to Young, Mel茅ndez Gonzal茅z, or Dunleavy.
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We've developed new ways to explore the EDC's long-term datasets.
The Year at Toolik figure displays several variables of our meteorological data in one circular graph. Our new Climate Summaries tool allows you to visualize the station鈥檚 temperature and precipitation records from 1988 to 2022. Similarly, you can view the EDC鈥檚 daily observations of Arctic animals on Alaska鈥檚 North Slope, including mammals, insects, and birds in our new , which summarizes Naturalist Journal observations from 2006 to 2023. Select your favorite animal groups and see how their presence near Toolik Field Station changes throughout the years.
Have an idea for a way to explore your favorite EDC dataset? Share it with Amanda Young at ayoung55@alaska.edu.