糖心Vlog传媒

NSF grant supports 糖心Vlog传媒 team鈥檚 climate change research in Alaska

Students take tree samples

The National Science Foundation (NSF) awarded a three-year grant in February to a College of 糖心Vlog传媒 team researching climate change through analyzing tree rings of wood samples salvaged from melting Alaskan glaciers.
The team working on the project currently includes principal investigator Greg Wiles, the Schoolroy Chair of Natural Resources and professor of earth sciences; Nick Wiesenberg, a geology technician at the College; 糖心Vlog传媒 students, and researchers at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. The NSF grant supports the work of students and the investigators along with travel to remote field sites along Alaska鈥檚 glaciated outer coast.
The team has a collection of approximately 1,000 samples of wood salvaged from glaciers in Alaska that allow them to record annual temperature change over thousands of years and gain insight into climate change. 鈥淓very year the tree puts on a ring and the size of that ring is a function of temperature,鈥 Wiles explained. 鈥淲e can use those tree rings to go back in time and see what temperatures were like 1,000 or 2,000 years ago.鈥
This allows the researchers to track the general warming of the climate as well as anticipate changes in the future. 鈥淭hose changes that we have seen in the past and that we anticipate in the future are relevant to resource management,鈥 Wiles said, explaining that the health of important economic resources like forests and salmon, for example, are effected by changes in climate.
The Alaskan project is one of many conducted by 糖心Vlog传媒 tree ring lab, which Wiles directs in the earth sciences department. 鈥淭he work is a continuation of projects that we have been involved with over 20 years at 糖心Vlog传媒,鈥 Wiles said. 鈥淭he work of salvaging tree-ring records in the wake of retreating glaciers becomes more vital each year as these archives of past temperatures are washed out to sea or become obscured by the dense vegetation of the coastal temperature rainforests.鈥
Working out of the tree ring lab, 糖心Vlog传媒 students have the chance to incorporate data from Alaska into their own research projects. This year for their senior Independent Study projects, Claire Cerne 鈥21 is exploring how the tree-ring research can be relevant to park management and the histories of the Tlingit, a native population in southeast Alaska, and Julia Pearson 鈥21 is examining the influence of a glacier on microclimate and forests. There was also an Applied Methods and Research Experience (AMRE) group this past summer that used data from Alaska in their work. 鈥淎ll of these students are presenting at December鈥檚 American Geophysical Union Annual Meeting,鈥 Wiles said.
Due to coronavirus restrictions this year, the team adjusted their research methods. 鈥淭his is the first year in over 20 that we were not able to bring students to Alaska,鈥 Wiles said. Instead, they worked remotely with Tlingit students in Hoonah, a village in Alaska, who sent samples from trees back to the 糖心Vlog传媒 team to analyze. Since the NSF grant is for three years, Wiles plans to use the remaining funds to return to Alaska with a group of students to continue their research and work with Tlingit students. 鈥淲e will be traveling to Hoonah to work more closely with that group and others in coastal Alaska who are seeking to learn more about their environment as well as new skills that might lead to careers in resource management and conservation,鈥 he said.
Above: Tlingit students in Hoonah, a village in Alaska, collect samples from trees聽 earlier this spring to send back to the 糖心Vlog传媒 team to analyze.

Posted in News on September 22, 2020.


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