Spring Fieldwork - Taku Glacier 2013

By Chris McNeil 

During the first week of April 2013, Pat Dryer from University of Alaska Southeast, and Shad O’Neel and I from the US Geological Survey, flew to Camp-10 on the Juneau Icefield. We landed on the main trunk of Taku Glacier just below C-10 and unloaded our gear from the ski plane.  The engine started and the plane took off, leaving just the three of us among the vast expanse of the Taku. Slogging what gear we would need immediately, we skinned up the nunatak to the almost completely buried camp. We spent the following hours digging into various buildings of C-10, retrieving what supplies and items we would need for our research over the next few days.

 

The “Cookshack” at Camp-10 on the Juneau Icefield, after digging for quite some time to unbury it from meters of snow.  Photo:  C. McNeil

Our purpose for coming to C-10 so far removed from the normal field season of the Juneau Icefield Research Program (JIRP) is related to a project aimed at better understanding runoff into the Gulf of Alaska (GOA). The Taku River is a large contributor of fresh water to the GOA. Our task this spring was measuring snowfall at multiple glaciers around the GOA where we used high frequency ground penetrating radar (GPR) to determine winter snowfall.  Our aim is to connect the glacier mass balance with the hydrology, which carries nutrients to the ocean, drives the Alaska Coastal Current, and ultimately feeds the critters that we end up eating!

Pat Dryer tows the GPR in front of a snow covered Taku Range.  Photo:  C. McNeil

Over the next few days we collected GPR data along the main trunk of the Taku Glacier, including the historic survey line of “Profile 4” just in front of C-10. We also completed a snow pit at the long measured “Taku Glacier test pit #4”, a snow pit that has been dug in front of C-10 every summer by JIRP participants since the late 1940s.

 

Pat Dryer and Chris McNeil trying to stay out of the weather while drilling a snow core at Taku Glacier snow pit site #4.  Photo:  S. O'Neel

With a large storm system threatening to pin us in camp for what could have been a week, we had Coastal Helicopters pick us up. Touching down in Juneau, Shad and I soon hopped on a plane back to Anchorage, making the C-10 to Anchorage traverse in just 12 hours! Our nightly readings of the literature in the radio room at C-10 informed us that we were the first people doing fieldwork out of C-10 during April since 1966. As Shad and I are both JIRP alumni we were proud to be part of another milestone in JIRP history. Although we didn’t accomplish everything we hoped to, we got a good start on the project. When combined with all the other field data collected this spring, the Taku data will help to fill a big gap in snowfall measurements around the state.  In future trips we will continue accumulation measurements and place ablation wires along the centerline of the ablation zone of the Taku.  The data collected this spring and in future trips will supplement measurements made by JIRP participants and also be a large part of my graduate thesis.

[EDITOR'S NOTE:  Chris McNeil and Dr. Shad O'Neel are multi-year JIRP participants, with their first JIRP field seasons in 2009 and 1996 respectively.  The Foundation for Glacier and Environmental Research (FGER, JIRP parent organization) is excited to continue and expand research partnerships with affiliated and external researchers.  Thank you, Chris!]   

Welcome to the 2013 JIRP Expedition Blog

By Jeff Kavanaugh, JIRP Director

Taku Towers as seen from Camp 10, JIRP 2012.  Photo:  J. Kavanaugh

Welcome to the 2013 Juneau Icefield Research Program expedition blog.  Over the course of the program, students, staff, and faculty will post entries describing their experiences on the icefield.  Through these entries, you will be able to traverse the icefield with us, participate in a wide range of field research, and share in the day-to-day life on the icefield.  You will also meet and get to know the members of this year’s expedition.

The main program begins on June 21, and runs through August 16.  In the days leading up to our arrival in Juneau, we will be bringing you a few pre-JIRP posts that will demonstrate some of the preparations that go into a successful expedition – and will set the stage for both the field season and the main blogging effort.    

We invite you to check back regularly.  If you would like to be notified of new postings, please follow us on Facebook and Twitter; your comments are also welcomed.  If you have a question you would like answered “from the ice”, please feel free to ask – we’ll do our best to answer them!  Post your questions in the blog comments or on Facebook.

Here’s looking forward to a fantastic summer on the icefield – please join us!

Dr. Jeff Kavanaugh

Director, JIRP

 

Links:

JIRP 2012 – Blogging From the Field

JIRP on Facebook

JIRP on Twitter

JIRP on YouTube

Welcome to the new JIRP website

We are pleased to bring you a new Juneau Icefield Research Program (JIRP) online presence starting in 2013! The site is still a work in progress, but we are excited to provide greater functionality and improved opportunities to learn about JIRP and engage with the JIRP community. 

We value your input on the new website and encourage you to give us your feedback on what you would like to see at juneauicefield.com.  Please make suggestions in the comments for this post (below).

Current efforts by JIRP (and its non-profit parent organization the Foundation for Glacier and Environmental Research) are focused on preparation for the 2013 expedition.  As we prepare we are continually motivated by the energy, excitement, and experience of past summer adventures on the Juneau Icefield.

To help keep the JIRP energy flowing in the off season have a look at the following short video by acclaimed film maker Chip Duncan.  Also, experience JIRP 2012 through the awesome blogging efforts of this past summer.  All 'Blogging From the Field 2012' posts are archived here.