{"id":230671,"date":"2017-07-27T17:00:16","date_gmt":"2017-07-27T21:00:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/uncategorized\/where-global-warming-gets-real-inside-nasas-mission-to-the-north-pole-the-guardian.php"},"modified":"2017-07-27T17:00:16","modified_gmt":"2017-07-27T21:00:16","slug":"where-global-warming-gets-real-inside-nasas-mission-to-the-north-pole-the-guardian","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/nasa\/where-global-warming-gets-real-inside-nasas-mission-to-the-north-pole-the-guardian.php","title":{"rendered":"Where global warming gets real: inside Nasa&#8217;s mission to the north pole &#8211; The Guardian"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    From the window of a Nasa    aircraft flying over the Arctic, looking down on the ice sheet    that covers most of Greenland, its easy    to see why it is so hard to describe climate change. The scale    of polar ice, so dramatic and so clear from a plane flying at    450 metres (1,500ft)  high enough to appreciate the scope of    the ice and low enough to sense its mass  is nearly impossible    to fathom when you arent sitting at that particular vantage    point.  <\/p>\n<p>    But its different when you are there, cruising over the ice    for hours, with Nasas monitors all over the cabin streaming    data output, documenting in real time  dramatising, in a sense     the depth of the ice beneath. You get it, because you can see    it all there in front of you, in three dimensions.  <\/p>\n<p>    Imagine a thousand centuries of heavy snowfall, piled up and    compacted into stone-like ice atop the bedrock of Greenland, an    Arctic island almost a quarter the size of the US. Imagine all    of modern human history, from the Neolithic revolution 12,000    years ago  when humans moved from hunting and gathering to    agriculture, and from there, eventually, to urban societies     until today. All of the snow that fell on the Arctic during that    entire history is gathered up in just the top layers of the ice    sheet.  <\/p>\n<p>    Imagine the dimensions of that ice: 1.71m sq km (656,000 sq    miles), three times the size of Texas. At its belly  from the    top layer, yesterdays snowfall, to the bottom layer, which is    made of snow that fell out of the sky 115,000-130,000 years ago     it reaches 3,200 metres (10,500ft) thick, nearly four times    taller than the worlds highest    skyscraper.  <\/p>\n<p>    Imagine the weight of this thing: at the centre of Greenland,    the ice is so heavy that it warps the land itself, pushing    bedrock 359 metres (1,180ft) below sea level. Under its own    immense weight, the ice comes alive, folding and rolling in    solid streams, in glaciers that slowly push outward. This is a    head-spinningly dynamic system that we still dont fully    understand  and that we really ought to learn far more about,    and quickly. In theory, if this massive thing were fully    drained, and melted into the sea, the water contained in it    would make the worlds oceans rise by 7 metres (23ft).  <\/p>\n<p>    When you fly over entire mountain ranges whose tips barely peek    out from under the ice  and these are just the visible ones     its possible to imagine what would happen if even a fraction    of this quantity of pent-up freshwater were unleashed. You can    plainly see how this thing would flood the coasts of the world,    from Brooklyn to Bangladesh.  <\/p>\n<p>    The crew of Nasas Operation    IceBridge have seen this ice from every imaginable angle.    IceBridge is an aerial survey of the polar regions that has    been underway for nearly a decade  the most ambitious of its    kind to date. It has yielded a growing dataset that helps    researchers document, among other things, how much, and at what    rate, ice is disappearing from the poles, contributing to    global sea-level rises, and to a variety of other phenomena    related to climate change.  <\/p>\n<p>    Alternating seasonally between the north and south poles,    Operation Icebridge mounts months-long campaigns in which it    operates eight- to 12-hour daily flights, as often as weather    permits. This past spring season, when I joined them in the    Arctic, they launched 40 flights, but had 63 detailed flight    plans prepared. Operation IceBridge seeks to create a    continuous data record of the constantly shifting ice by    bridging  hence the name  data retrieved from a Nasa    satellite that ended its service in 2009, called ICESat, and its    successor, ICESat-2, which is    due to launch next year. The Nasa dataset, which offers a broad    overview of the state of polar ice, is publicly available to    any researcher anywhere in the world.  <\/p>\n<p>    In April, I travelled to Kangerlussuaq, in south-west    Greenland, and joined the IceBridge field crew  a group of    about 30 laser, radar, digital mapping, IT and GPS engineers,    glaciologists, pilots and mechanics. What I saw there were    specialists who have, over the course of almost 10 years on    this mission, mastered the art and science of polar data    hunting while, at the same time, watching as the very concept    of data, of fact-based discourse, has crumbled in their culture    at home.  <\/p>\n<p>    On each flight, I witnessed a remarkable tableau. Even as    Arctic glaciers were losing mass right below the speeding    plane, and even as raw data gleaned directly from those    glaciers was pouring in on their monitors, the Nasa engineers sat    next to their fact-recording instruments, sighing and wondering    aloud if Americans had lost the eyes to see what they were    seeing, to see the facts. What they told me revealed something    about what it means to be a US federally funded climate    researcher in 2017  and what they didnt, or couldnt, tell me    revealed even more.  <\/p>\n<p>    On my first morning in    Greenland, I dropped in on a weather meeting with John Sonntag,    mission scientist and de facto field captain for Nasas    Operation IceBridge. I stood inside the cosy weather office at    Kangerlussuaq airport, surrounded by old Danish-language    topographical maps of Greenland, as Sonntag explained to me    that the ice sheet, because of its shape, can generate unique    weather patterns (the ice isnt flat, its curved, he said,    making a little mound shape with his hands).  <\/p>\n<p>    The fate of the polar ice has occupied the last decade of his    life (Im away from home so much  its probably why Im not    married). But at pre-flight weather meetings, polar ice is    mostly of concern to him for the quirky way it might affect    that days weather. The figure in Sonntags mind this morning    isnt metres of sea rise, but dollars in flight time. The    estimated price tag for a flight on Operation IceBridge is    about $100,000; a single hour of flight time is said to cost    $10-15,000. If Sonntag misreads the weather and the plane has    to turn back, he loses flight time, a lot of taxpayers money,    and precious data.  <\/p>\n<p>    I would come to view Sonntag as something of a Zen sage of    atmospheric conditions. He checks the weather the moment he    wakes in the morning, before he eats or even uses the bathroom.    He told me that it wasnt simply about knowing what the    weather is. With weather, there is no is. Whats needed is    the ability to grasp constant dynamic change.  <\/p>\n<p>    What Im doing, he said, is correcting my current reading    against my previous one  which he had made the last possible    moment the night before, just before falling asleep.    Basically, Im calibrating. The machine that he is    calibrating, of course, is himself. This, as I would learn, was    a pretty good summary of Sonntags modus operandi as a leader:    constantly and carefully adjusting his readings in order to    better navigate his expeditions shifting conditions.  <\/p>\n<p>    Nevertheless, despite the metaphorical implications of his    weather-watching, Sonntag was ever focused on the literal. At    the weather meeting, I asked him about his concern over some    low cloud cover that was developing  a situation that could    result in scrubbing the flight. Was his concern for the    functionality of the aircrafts science equipment, its    ice-penetrating radars, its lasers and cameras?  <\/p>\n<p>    On that day, as it turned out, Sonntag was more worried about    pilot visibility. You know, so we dont fly into a mountain,    he explained, without taking his eyes off the blobs dancing    across the monitors. That kind of thing.  <\/p>\n<p>    A few weeks before I met Sonntag, a reporter had asked him:    What makes this real to you? The question had startled him,    and he was evidently still thinking about it. I honestly    didnt know what to say, he told me.  <\/p>\n<p>    Sonntag cuts a trim, understated figure in his olive green Nasa    flight suit, fleece jacket and baseball cap, and his    enthusiasms and mellow ironies tend to soften his slow-burn,    man-on-a-literal-mission intensity. I could imagine how a    reporter might miss the underlying zeal; but get to know    Sonntag and youll learn why, even three weeks later, that    question was still rattling around his head.  <\/p>\n<p>    Im still kind of at a loss, to be honest, he told me. What    makes it real? I mean, wow, where do I start?  <\/p>\n<p>    It is indeed a strange question to ask someone who was once on    a high-altitude flight when temperatures fell so low that the    planes fuel turned solid, almost sending it straight down into    Antarctica, directly on to the ice, in the middle of the    darkest of nights. Each of the 63 flight plans for this season    in the Arctic was the result of months of meticulous planning.    A team of polar scientists from across the US sets the research    priorities, in collaboration with flight crews, who make sure    the routes are feasible; the mission is managed from Nasas    Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland.  <\/p>\n<p>    Sonntag is there at every phase, including at the construction    and installation of the scientific instruments, and he is the    person in the field responsible for executing the mission. He    is supposed to have a plan for every contingency: if the plane    goes down on the ice, hes got plans for that, too. He is    responsible for making sure that his crew have adequately    backed up and stored many terabytes of data, and that their own    creature comforts are taken care of. On days off, he cooks    gumbo for them.  <\/p>\n<p>    The reporter probably had something else in mind. The melting    of ice, the rising waters, and all the boring-seeming charts    that document the connections between the two  what makes that    real? To Sonntag and his crew, it is as real as the data that    they have personally helped fish out of the ice.  <\/p>\n<p>    Sea levels, which were more or less constant for the past 2,000    years, have climbed at a rate of    roughly 1.7mm a year in the past century; in the past 25    years, that rate has doubled to 3.4mm a    year, already enough to create adverse effects in coastal    areas. A conservative estimate holds that waters will rise    roughly 0.9 metres (3ft) by the year 2100, which will place    hundreds of millions of people in jeopardy.  <\/p>\n<p>    Given the scale of sea- and ice-related questions, the vantage    point that is needed is from the air and from space, and is    best served through large, continuous, state-supported    investments: hence Nasa. There is a lot we dont know and a lot    that the ice itself, which is a frozen archive of past climate    changes, can tell us. But we need the eyes to see it.  <\/p>\n<p>    First built during the cold war    to track Russian submarines, the P-3 Orion aircraft, a    four-engine turboprop, is designed for long, low-flying    surveillance missions. IceBridges P-3, based at Wallops Flight    Facility in Virginia, is armed with a suite of instruments    mounted under the plane and operated by engineers sitting at    stations in the cabin. A laser altimetry system  which bounces    laser beams from the bottom of the aircraft to the top of the    ice and back  determines the height and topography of the    uppermost layer of ice; a digital mapping system takes    high-resolution photos of the ice, helping us see the patterns    in which it is changing shape; and a radar system sends    electromagnetic pulses through the ice, thousands of feet  and    a hundred thousand years  to the land beneath.  <\/p>\n<p>    This data shows us where the ice is growing and where it is    shrinking, and helps researchers determine its current mass.    The IceBridge data has also helped create a 3D map of an    ice-locked land that no human eyes have ever seen: the    territory of Greenland, its mountains, valleys, plains and    canyons, and also a clear view of the layers of ice that have    grown above it. Nasa repeats its IceBridge flights annually, to    chart how the ice changes from year to year, and, by comparison    with earlier satellite data, from decade to decade. For the    integrity of the data, it is best to repeat the flights over    exactly the same terrain. The path of each IceBridge flight    must adhere to a line so narrow that they had to invent a new    flight navigation system, which Sonntag cannot help but    describe with boyish glee (We basically trick the plane into    thinking its landing!).  <\/p>\n<p>    In trying to grasp how the ice works, its necessary to know    the shape of the underlying terrain: in places where the land    slopes up, for instance, we know that ice will flow slower.    IceBridge data helped discover and chart a canyon in northern    Greenland the size of the Grand Canyon. In addition to being a    wondrous discovery in its own right, this was useful in    understanding where, and how, the ice is moving. One effect of    this giant canyon system can be seen at the coast, where sea    water can seep into cavities, potentially melting lower layers    of ice. Other aerial data has shown how glacier fronts, which    served as corks holding back the ice flow behind them, have    diminished and unleashed the flow, causing more ice to flush    into the sea at increasingly rapid paces.  <\/p>\n<p>    Fantastic 3D maps of the ice sheet created with IceBridge data    have also helped researchers locate rare, invaluable Eemian    ice, from more than 100,000 years ago. This was an era when the    Earth was warm  similar to today  and in which the seas were    many feet higher, which resembles the world to which we are    headed. By drilling deep into the ice, glaciologists can    excavate ice cores containing specks of materials such as    volcanic ash, or frozen bubbles that preserve precious pockets    of ancient air that hold chemical samples of long-departed    climates. Because of IceBridge data, researchers know where to    look for these data-rich ice layers.  <\/p>\n<p>    These are among the reasons that John Sonntags head hurts, and    why he doesnt know where to begin or what to think when people    ask him what makes this real for him. Behind even well-meaning    questions is a culture of ignorance, or self-interested    indifference, that has made it easy for a Republican-led,    corporation-owned US government to renege on the Paris    climate agreement, to gut the Environmental Protection    Agency, and to slash billions of dollars of climate    change-related funds from the federal budget this year. When    the White House recently proposed cuts to Nasas climate-change    research divisions, the media helped them along by burying the    story under speciously positive headlines: Trumps Nasa budget    supports deep space travel, crowed CBS News. The worlds    coasts are facing catastrophic sea rise, but at least Americans    can look forward to watching their countrymen grill hot dogs on    Mars.  <\/p>\n<p>    The US built Kangerlussuaqs    airfield in the early 1940s, and they still maintain a small    airbase there. In 1951, America built a giant fortress on the    ice, Thule Air Base, in north-west Greenland  strategically    equidistant from Russia and the US where it secretly kept    armed nuclear weapons. In one of naval historys most ambitious    armadas, the Americans cut through the ice, created a port, and    effected a conquest second in scope only to the D-day invasion.    And all they had to do was uproot an Inuit settlement.  <\/p>\n<p>    The USs history in Greenland gives the lie to the notion that    ice research is inherently peaceful, much less apolitical.    Glaciology advanced as a field partly through the work of US    scientists serving the needs of their countrys rapidly growing    nuclear war machine in the 1960s, helping to build Camp Century, a fabled    city under ice in northern Greenland  and designing    Project Iceworm, a top-secret system of under-ice tunnels    nearby, which was intended as a launch site for hidden nuclear    missiles. In 1968, at the height of the war in Vietnam,    a nuclear-armed B-52    crashed near Thule. A fire, started when a crewman left a    pillow over a heating vent, resulted in four atomic weapons     hydrogen bombs  plunging into the ice, and releasing plutonium    into the environment.  <\/p>\n<p>    When our flight landed in Kangerlussuaq, we passed quickly    through passport control, but our bags were nowhere to be    found. For 40 minutes we could see the one and only commercial    plane at this airfields one and only gate just sitting on the    tarmac, with our bags still in it. This wasnt a serious    problem  Kangerlussuaqs one hotel was just up a short flight    of steps from the gate  but it did seem odd that the bags    hadnt come through customs. Another passenger, sensing my    confusion, approached me.  <\/p>\n<p>    Yankee? he asked.  <\/p>\n<p>    Yankee, I replied.  <\/p>\n<p>    Customs, the man told me, was actually just one guy, who had a    tendency to mysteriously disappear.  <\/p>\n<p>    By the way, he added conspiratorially. You know customs here    has a special arrangement with the Americans. The customs guy,    the stranger told me, turns a blind eye to liquor headed to the    US Air Force bar on the other side of the airfield.  <\/p>\n<p>    Kangerlussuaq (population 500), or as the Yanks prefer to call    it, Kanger, still feels like a frontier station. Most locals    work either at the airport or at the hotel. Next to the    airfields main hangar, local people house the huskies that    pull their sledges. The roads of Kangerlussuaq can be dicey;    there are no sidewalks. Once you leave the tiny settlement,    there arent roads at all; and if you go north or east, of    course, theres only ice. Decommissioned US air force Jato    bottles  jet boosters that, to the untrained eye, resemble    small warheads  are ubiquitous around Kangerlussuaq, usually    as receptacles for discarded cigarette butts. In the hotel    cafeteria you can see American and European glaciologists,    greeting each other with surprise and hugs, because the last    time they met was a year or two ago, when they ran into each    other at the other pole.  <\/p>\n<p>    When I finally got my bag, I made my way down to the 664    barracks, where the crew was staying. But before I met the    crew, I met the data itself. In a small, slouchy barracks    bedroom, near the front door, I encountered two Nasa servers.    IT engineers could, and often would, sit on the bed as they    worked.  <\/p>\n<p>    The window was cracked open, to cool the room and soothe the    crackling servers, whose constant low hum, like a shamans    chant, was accompanied by the pleasant aroma of gently baking    wires  one of the more visceral stages of the daily ritual of    storing, transferring, copying and processing data captured on    the most recent flight. After years of listening to Americans    debate the existence of data demonstrating climate change, it    was comforting to come in here and smell it.  <\/p>\n<p>    When I first arrived, I found one of the IT crew, dressed in    jeans, T-shirt and slippers, and with big, sad, sleepy, beagle    eyes, reclining next to the server, his feet up on a desk,    chowing on a Nutella snack pack. He explained the irony of his    struggle to keep the servers happy in the far north. A week    earlier, when IceBridge was operating its northern flights from    Thule Air Base, they couldnt seem to find any way of getting    the server rooms temperature down: Were in the Arctic, but    our problem is finding cold air.  <\/p>\n<p>    For a moment he paused to consider the sheer oddness of life,    but then he shrugged, and polished off his Nutella snack. But    we just chug on, you know? he said.  <\/p>\n<p>    This attitude captured something essential about IceBridge:    its scrappy. Its the kind of operation in which the engineers    are expected to bring their own off-the-shelf hardware back-ups    from home. (As one radar tech told me: if your keyboard breaks    in the Arctic, you cant just go to Walmart and buy a new    one.) More than one crew member described IceBridges major    piece of hardware, its P-3 aircraft, as a hand-me-down. When    the Nasa crew talked about their P-3 they sometimes sounded as    though they were talking about a beloved, oversized, elderly    pet dog, who can act dopey but, when pressed, is surprisingly    agile. IceBridges P-3 is 50 years old, but as one of the navy    pilots told me, they baby the hell out of it. It just got a    new pair of wings. I got the strong sense that this climate    data gathering operation was something of an underdog    enterprise  the moodier sibling of Nasas more celebrated    deep-space projects.  <\/p>\n<p>    But these unsung flights are not without their own brand of    Nasa drama. The IceBridge crew would tell me, with dark humour,    the story of the time a plane was in such dire straits that    everyone aboard was panicking. One man was staring at a photo    of his children on his phone, and in his other hand, was    clutching a crucifix. Another man was pinned to the ceiling.    Someone actually yelled Were gonna die!, like in the movies.    John Sonntag, on the other hand, sat there, serenely assessing    the situation.  <\/p>\n<p>    During my time in Greenland in April this year, I didnt    witness Sonntag manage a distressed aircraft, but I did watch    him carefully navigate a Nasa crew through a turbulent    political season. In the week I was there, the group was    preparing for two anxiety-provoking scenarios, courtesy of    Washington, DC. One was an imminent visit from several members    of Congress. As one engineer put it to me, We just get    nervous, honestly, because we dont know what these    politicians agenda is: are they friend or foe?  <\/p>\n<p>    The other was an impending shutdown of the entire US federal    government: if Congress didnt make a decision about the budget    by Friday that week, the government would close all operations    indefinitely. (The sticking point was budgetary questions    related to Trumps proposed border wall.) If the government    shut down, Operation IceBridge was done for the season; the    Nasa crew would be sent home that day.  <\/p>\n<p>    This had happened before, in 2013, just as IceBridge was en    route to Antarctica. Congressional Republicans shut down the    government in their effort to thwart Obamas diabolical plot to    offer medical care to millions of uninsured Americans. Much of    the 2013 mission was cancelled, with millions of dollars, many    hundreds of hours of preparation, and, most importantly,    critical data, lost.  <\/p>\n<p>    I still cant really talk about that without feeling those    emotions again, Sonntag told me. It was kind of traumatic for    us.  <\/p>\n<p>    The crew of IceBridge was facing an absurd scenario: living in    fear of a shutdown of their work by Congress one day and,    shortly thereafter, having to smile and impress members of that    same Congress.  <\/p>\n<p>    Conditioned by the tribulations    of modern commercial airline travel, I was unprepared for the    casualness of my first Nasa launch. The feeling in the hangar    before the flight, and as the crew prepared to launch, was of    shift workers who are hyper-attentive to their particular tasks    and not the least concerned with gratuitous formalities. The    flights were long and the deployments were long; the key to not    burning out was to pace oneself and to not linger over anything    that wasnt essential. Everyone was a trusted pro and nobody    was out to prove anything to anyone else.  <\/p>\n<p>    Shortly before our 9am takeoff, I asked Sonntag what the plane    should feel like when everything was going well  what should I    be looking for? He smiled sheepishly. To be honest, if you see    people sleeping, thats a good sign.  <\/p>\n<p>    On the eight-hour flights, seeing engineers asleep at their    stations meant the instruments below their feet were happily    collecting data. For some stretches, there wasnt even data to    collect: hours were spent flying between data target sites.    (Over the intercom, a pilot would occasionally ask, Hey, we    sciencing now or just flying?) Flight crew, who attend to the    plane but are not directly connected to the data operation,    occupied the cabin like cats, curled up proprietarily, high up    on fluffy, folded-up engine covers.  <\/p>\n<p>    This pervasive somnolence  the hypnotic hum of the propellers,    the occasional scene of crewmen horsing around in their flight    suits, which gave them the look of boys in pajamas  coupled    with the low-altitude sweeps through fantastic mountains of    ice, gave the whole situation a dreamlike quality.  <\/p>\n<p>    From the windows of the P-3, at 450 metres, you dont need to    have read anything about glaciers to know what they are. At    that low altitude, you can see the deep textures and the    crevasses of the ice, and just how far the glacier extends    across the land. The eye immediately grasps that the ice is a    creature on the move, positively bursting ahead, while also not    appearing to move at all, like a still photo of a rushing    river.  <\/p>\n<p>    Seeing the polar ice from above, you get a very different view    from that seen by writers in past centuries, who saw this    landscape, if at all, by boat or, more likely, from a drawing.    But the vision, to them, was clear enough: it was the End, the    annihilating whiteness of death and extinction. Herman Melville    described this colour as the dumb blankness, full of meaning,    in a wide landscape of snows  a colorless all-color of atheism    from which we shrink. This is where so many of those old    stories terminated. The Arctic is where the monster in    Frankenstein leaps off a ship on to the ice, never to be seen    again. Polar settings spell doom for Poes sailors, and Captain    Nemo, who are pulled into the icy maelstrom. And celebrated    real-life travellers did, in fact, die gruesomely on the ice,    in search of the    Northwest Passage, or the north pole.  <\/p>\n<p>    But, from the window of Nasas P-3, that old narrative seems    inaccurate. Consider that whiteness, which so terrified    Melville and Poe, who ends his Antarctic saga The Narrative of Arthur    Gordon Pym with a horrifying italicised refrain on the word    white. But polar snow and ice, precisely because it is white,    with a quality known as high albedo, deflects solar energy back    into space and helps keep earths climate cool; the loss of all    this white material means more heat is absorbed and the earth    warms faster. In a variety of other ways, including moderating    weather patterns, the ice helps makes life on earth more    livable. The extreme conditions of the poles, so useful for    instilling fear in 19th-century readers, actually make the    world more habitable.  <\/p>\n<p>    Our bias against the poles can be detected even in that typical    term of praise for this icy landscape, otherworldly. This    description is exactly incorrect: the Arctic is intimately    connected with every other part of the planet.  <\/p>\n<p>    This, too, is something you can see. Flying over it, at a low    altitude, I was struck by the familiarity of the thing, how    much of Greenland was a visual echo of my northern homelands.    In the muscular frozen ripples of its glaciers, created by an    intensely pressured flow, I saw the same strong hand that    deeply etched those giant scratches into the big boulders of    Central Park in New York City. This isnt an analogy: those    marks in Manhattan were made by shifting ice, the very same ice    layers that still have a foothold in Greenland. I grew up, and    have spent most of my life, in Ohio and New England, places    that were carved out by that ice: ponds originally made of    meltwater from the last great ice age, low hills smoothed over    by retreating glaciers. That old ice gave shape and signature    to almost every important place in my life, and in the lives of    so many others. And, in the future, this ice will continue to    shape the places were from, right before our eyes. It is only    our ignorance that makes us call it otherworldly.  <\/p>\n<p>    But even as we passed through    this landscape, even as the lasers and radars took their deep    gulps of data from the ice, I could hear expressions of anxiety    from the data hunters. At the same time that were getting    better at gathering this data, we seem to be losing the ability    to communicate its importance to the public, one engineer told    me four hours into a flight, during a transit between glaciers.  <\/p>\n<p>    You can hear this anxiety surface in the humour floating around    the crew. I heard one engineer joke that it might be easier to    just rig up a data randomising machine, since many people out    there seem to think thats what their data is anyway.  <\/p>\n<p>    I mean, itd be much easier, and cheaper, to do maintenance on    that, he pointed out.  <\/p>\n<p>    In another conversation, about how to increase public awareness    about climate change in the US, I asked one of the senior crew    members whether they would welcome a writer from Breitbart    aboard one of these flights.  <\/p>\n<p>    Oh, absolutely, he said. Id love for them to see what were    doing here. I think sitting on this plane, seeing the ice, and    watching the data come in would be incredibly eye-opening for    them.  <\/p>\n<p>    His optimism was inspiring and worrisome to me.  <\/p>\n<p>    The mantra of the crew is no politics. I heard it said over    and over again: just stick to the job, dont speak above your    pay grade. But, of course, you dont need to have a no-politics    policy unless your work is already steeped in politics.  <\/p>\n<p>    Speaking with one of the scientific researchers mid-flight, I    got a very revealing reply. When I asked this researcher about    the anthropogenesis of climate change, the tone changed. What    had been a comfortable chat became stilted and deliberate.    There was a little eye-roll toward my audio recorder. Suddenly    my interlocutor, a specialist in ice, got pedantic, telling me    that there were others more qualified to speak about rising    sea levels. I offered to turn off my recorder. As soon as it    was off, the researcher spoke freely and with the confidence of    a leading expert in the field. The off-the-record view    expressed wasnt simply one of sober agreement with the    scientific consensus, but of passionate outrage. Of course    climate change is related to human activity! Weve all seen the    graphs!  <\/p>\n<p>    The tonal difference between this off-the-record answer and the    taped answer  that I should consult someone else  told me all    I needed to know. Or so I thought  the researcher then asked    me to turn my recorder back on: there was one addendum, for the    record.  <\/p>\n<p>    Richard Nixon, the researcher said, looking down at the red    recording light. Nixon established some good climate policy.    Theres a tradition in both parties of doing this work. And, I    mean, if Nixon    <\/p>\n<p>    The researcher laughed a bit, realising how this was sounding.    Well, thats what Im hanging my hopes on, anyway.  <\/p>\n<p>    Over the planes open intercom, there was suddenly, and    uncharacteristically, talk of the days headlines. While we    were in flight, people around the world were marking Earth Day    by demonstrating in support    of climate rationality and against the current US regime.    On Twitter, #MarchForScience was trending at the exact moment    Nasas P-3 was out flying for science. There was even a local    protest: American and European scientists took to the street of    Kangerlussuaq for a small but high-profile demonstration. While    it was happening, one of the engineers piped up on the P-3s    intercom.  <\/p>\n<p>    Anyone else sorry to be missing the march?  <\/p>\n<p>    But the earnest question was only met with silence and a few    jokes. Among the Nasa crew, there had been some talk about    trying to do a flyover of the Kangerlussuaq march, to take an    aerial photo of it, but the plan was nixed for logistical    reasons. The timing was off. The senior crew seemed relieved    that it was out of the question.  <\/p>\n<p>    Later that week, after my    second and final flight  making a total of 16 hours in the air    with Nasa  the crew retreated to the barracks for a quick    science meeting, beers in hand, followed by a family-style    dinner. We dont seem to get enough of each other here, one    of the engineers told me, as he poured a glass of wine over ice    that the crew had harvested from the front of a glacier the day    before. One of the engineers asked a glaciologist about the age    of this block of ice, and frowned at the disappointing reply:    it probably wasnt more than a few hundred years old.  <\/p>\n<p>    Well, thats still older than America, right? he said.  <\/p>\n<p>    Outside, the sky wasnt dark, though it was past 10pm. In a    couple of months, there would be sunlight all night. After    dinner, one of the crews laser technicians lounged on a couch,    playing an acoustic version of the song Angie over and over    again, creating a pleasantly mesmerising effect. Two crew    members talked of killer methane gas. But most sat around,    drinking and telling stories. One of the pilots tried to    convince someone he had seen a polar bear from the cockpit that    day. These deployments are tiring, someone told me.    Bullshitting is critical.  <\/p>\n<p>    One of the crew spent his off-days on excursions with a    camera-equipped drone, and had made spectacular videos of his    explorations, which he edited and set to moody Bush tunes. I    joined the crew as they gathered around his laptop to watch his    latest. There was something moving in seeing these people  who    had spent all day, and indeed many months and years, flying    over ice and obsessing over ice-related data  now spending    their free time relaxing by watching videos of yet more ice.  <\/p>\n<p>    As usual, politics soon crept into the picture. The next video    that popped up was footage recently shot at the Thule base. The    video showed some of this same Nasa crew hiking through an    abandoned concrete bunker, a former storage site for US Nike    anti-aircraft missiles. Today its just an eerie, rusted,    shadow-filled underground space, its floor covered in thick    ice. When these images came on the screen, the crew fell quiet,    watching themselves, only a week ago, putting on ice skates and    doing figure-eights over the ruins of their countrys cold war    weapons systems.  <\/p>\n<p>    An engineer chipped a shard off the frozen block harvested the    day before. Perhaps sensing my mood, he dropped it into a glass    and poured me some whiskey  over ice older than America  and    said: Well anyway, maybe thisll cheer you up.  <\/p>\n<p>    Early the next morning, before the crew boarded the P-3 for    another eight-hour flight over polar ice, a rare political    debate broke out. Four of the crew were discussing the imminent    Congressional visit, which prompted one of the veteran pilots    to recite, once again, the mission mantra: Stick to science:    no politics. But because that approach felt increasingly less    plausible in 2017, one of the ice specialists, feeling    frustrated, launched into a small speech about how Americans    dont take data seriously, and how its going to kill us all.    Nobody disagreed. Someone jokingly said: Maybe its best if    you dont fly today. To which another added, Yeah, you should    stay on the ground and just do push-ups all day.  <\/p>\n<p>    Finally, John Sonntag  who had been too busy reviewing flight    plans to hear the chatter  stood up and tapped his watch. OK    guys, he said. Lets go. Its time to fly.  <\/p>\n<p>    Main image: Nasa\/Joe    MacGregor  <\/p>\n<p>     Follow the Long Read on Twitter    at @gdnlongread, or sign    up to the long read weekly email here.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>View post: <\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/environment\/2017\/jul\/27\/watching-ice-melt-inside-nasas-mission-to-the-north-pole\" title=\"Where global warming gets real: inside Nasa's mission to the north pole - The Guardian\">Where global warming gets real: inside Nasa's mission to the north pole - The Guardian<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> From the window of a Nasa aircraft flying over the Arctic, looking down on the ice sheet that covers most of Greenland, its easy to see why it is so hard to describe climate change. The scale of polar ice, so dramatic and so clear from a plane flying at 450 metres (1,500ft) high enough to appreciate the scope of the ice and low enough to sense its mass is nearly impossible to fathom when you arent sitting at that particular vantage point. But its different when you are there, cruising over the ice for hours, with Nasas monitors all over the cabin streaming data output, documenting in real time dramatising, in a sense the depth of the ice beneath <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/nasa\/where-global-warming-gets-real-inside-nasas-mission-to-the-north-pole-the-guardian.php\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"limit_modified_date":"","last_modified_date":"","_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[20],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-230671","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-nasa"],"modified_by":null,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/230671"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=230671"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/230671\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=230671"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=230671"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/futurist-transhuman-news-blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=230671"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}