12/21/2011

Drift Station: Arctic Outposts of Superpower Science Review

Drift Station: Arctic Outposts of Superpower Science
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"Drift Station: Arctic Outposts of Superpower Science" is a truly attention-grabbing narrative of efforts in the twentieth century to understand the northern polar region. It focuses on the story of Arctic science propelled by imperial ambitions to the present. Floating on the icecap, these stations operated by a multitude of nations have been both intentional and the unintended consequences of national scientific efforts.
Althoff begins his narrative with a discussion of the science conducted during the three-year drift of the research vessel "Fram" between 1893 and 1896 while caught in the floe during an expedition led by Fridtjof Nansen. The Soviet Severnyy Polyus-1 (North Pole-1) or SP-1 expedition of 1937-1938 brought drift stations into the modern era and after an interruption for World War II they have been in continuous existence thereafter.
The first American drift station was established in 1950 and other followed thereafter. Until the last one of finally shut down in 2004, the Soviet Union/Russia had created 32 such drift stations over the years. The Americans tended toward shorter term encampments but were always present in the Arctic as well. This time was extended by nuclear submarines beginning with the "Nautilus" in the 1950s, all which conducted certain types of experiments built on the needs of the U.S. military. In all cases, these scientific facilities were military in operation; and their place as key outposts collecting data on meteorology, oceanography, and other scientific disciplines held consequences beyond the geopolitical and national security interests that had sparked them in the first place.
At the same time, Althoff makes clear that the strategic considerations of the North Pole for the Cold War transformed the region into a theater for military operations. This study offers a unique perspective on Arctic exploration. It is well worth reading.

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Closed to conventional passage, the Arctic Ocean and peripheral seas have nevertheless known European explorers since the sixteenth century. Systematic observation, however, dates only from the last years of the nineteenth century, with the epic drift of Fridtjof Nansen's ice ship Fram (1893-1896), the first scientific expedition of the modern era. Twentieth-century technology—the icebreaker, radio transmission, nuclear power, and aircraft—opened the Arctic for survey, basic research, and observation. World War II saw the inhospitable circumpolar Arctic transformed into a theater of military operations. The Cold War and the missile age saw governments staking further claims, because only a relatively short arc of maritime boreal waste separated North America and Eurasia. The complex interactions of air, ice, and water that drive circumpolar systems also serve as engines of oceanic and atmospheric circulation. As a result, meteorology, oceanography, geophysics, and many other areas of scientific research in the region soon became acutely linked to the economic, political, and particularly the politico-military interests of the Soviet Union, the United States, Canada, and the other Arctic nations. In response, both superpowers established "drift stations"—that is, isolated camps based on nomadic ice floes—to conduct crucial scientific research. During the Cold War, they were the objects of suspicion, particularly the Soviet stations, which often stood accused as bases for espionage. Today, with the world's climate system and global warming under study, Russian expertise, data, geography, and stewardship are crucial to the world community.

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