In Brief
Budget 2009
Australia's leadership in Antarctic science and research has been reinforced with the commitment of an extra $25.2 million over two years for the Australian Antarctic Division, and funding of $11.7 million in 2009-10 to continue the airlink program.
The $36.9 million in funding, announced in May, will underpin our commitment to scientific research, the maintenance of infrastructure at Australia's three Antarctic stations, Macquarie Island and the Wilkins aerodrome, and continue the government's commitment to the airlink program.
Polar Eyes: a journey to Antarctica
Photo: CSIRO
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Ross Sea Party photographs online
"Just about the wildest looking gang of men that I have ever seen in my life. Smoke-bleared eyes looked out from grey haggard faces; their hair was matted and uncut; their beards were impregnated with soot and grease." John King Davis.
The rescued party.
Photo: courtesy State Library of Victoria
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The party's epic sledging journeys encompassed 169 days. One member of the party, the Victorian (Andrew) Keith Jack, kept a detailed diary and took many striking photographs, which are housed at the State Library of Victoria.
The Ross Sea Party account, the Diaries of Keith Jack, and Ross Sea Party photographs, can now be viewed in the Victorian Stories section of the Culture Victoria website. The website tells the stories of people who have lived and worked in Victoria, and the events that have shaped the lives of Victorians and Australians. It was created through the Victorian Cultural Network - a collaborative project between the Australian Centre for Moving Image, Museum Victoria, National Gallery of Victoria, State Library of Victoria, and The Arts Centre.
Andrew McConville (State Library of Victoria) and Eleanor Whitworth (Arts Victoria).
Parliament House Exhibition
Part of Alison Lester's 'All the tracks of the Aurora' painting.
Photo: Alison Lester
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First Expedition Medicine Course for Australia
The first expedition medicine course for Australia has been developed by General Practice Training Tasmania in consultation with the Australian Antarctic Division's Polar Medicine Unit.
The Special Skills Post in Expedition Medicine aims to provide General Practice registrars with a comprehensive grounding in expedition medicine through a six month course involving travel medicine, general practice, emergency medicine, a self-guided workbook and an eight day field trip.
Course participants will have access to the Polar Medicine Unit staff and resources. The course is available as an optional part of general practice training in Tasmania. General Practice Training Tasmania and the Polar Medicine Unit are now exploring options for a certificate/diploma/masters program.
Australia Day Awards
Photo: Mat Oakes
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Southern Ocean Sentinel Workshop
A system for measuring climate change impacts in the Southern Ocean was the subject of an international scientific workshop convened in Hobart in April. The participants summarised the state of knowledge on observed and potential climate change impacts on Southern Ocean marine biodiversity, and considered the scientific and technological research required to establish a Southern Ocean Sentinel monitoring program that would signal the magnitudes and rates of change in Southern Ocean marine ecosystems, caused by climate change. They concluded that an international program to develop a system for predicting future impacts, including associated field monitoring, was feasible, and would contribute to established international climate programs. Collaborative links between Australian and international scientists and scientific programs are now being pursued to establish a Southern Ocean Sentinel.
Prince Albert II visits Davis
His Serene Highness Prince Albert II of Monaco visited Davis station in January as part of a month-long expedition to learn about the impact of climate change in Antarctica.
Prince Albert (left) and Davis Station Leader Bill de Bruyn.
Photo: Paul Endersby
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During his time at Davis the Prince was treated to a science and station tour, visited nearby rookeries and icebergs and spent an evening mixing with expeditioners and playing pool. Read more information about Prince Albert's 'South Pole Expedition'
Kids Antarctic Art Exhibition
Australian Antarctic Arts Fellow, Alison Lester, whose artwork has appeared in various issues of this magazine, has been on the exhibition trail with Kids Antarctic Art. Since the exhibition was opened in Hobart in 2007, it has had three showings in Melbourne, one in Brisbane and is scheduled for exhibition in Port Macquarie and Tokyo in 2009. You can view the exhibition online
Whale tags track bigger picture
The paths of 16 humpback whales, tagged and tracked over 6 months
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Sixteen whales were satellite tagged near Eden in New South Wales, last October, and their route tracked for almost six months over a distance of some 4000 km. The results showed that whales from Australia's east coast disperse more widely than previously thought, and outside the area traditionally identified for this population by the International Whaling Commission.
The study, led by the Australian Marine Mammal Centre Director, Dr Nick Gales, suggests the whales spend more time feeding in temperate waters than previously thought. These areas include east of Flinders Island, off northeast Tasmania, and west of Fiordland, New Zealand.
'This is the first study to show migration through Bass Strait and down Tasmania's west coast,' Dr Gales said.
'These tags will provide important information on the feeding distribution and behaviour of humpback whales in Antarctica and the relationship between their food source – krill – and retracting sea ice during the summer melt.'
View an animation of the whales' tracks
Back to Australian Antarctic Magazine 16: 2009 index
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