This summer, I'm heading up to northern Alaska for three months of fieldwork for a two-year NSF-funded project with Dr. Sarah Godsey, a new faculty member at Idaho State University. We are investigating how climate influences the hydrology and biogeochemistry of Arctic hillslopes. I plan on detailing my adventures, life at Toolik Research Station, and our project in greater detail as I learn more about it too!
Right now, I'm enjoying my first and last night in the aptly named, but surprisingly flat Fairbanks, where the weather is a balmy 61 F. Tomorrow morning, I will take a truck 350 miles north to Toolik Lake, where the field station is. I got some last minute gear and snacks for the 8-10 hour drive at the lovely Fred Meyer, Alaska's equivalent of Meijer or Wal-Mart.
Today I got to see most of the country, flying from Raleigh, NC to Washington, DC to Seattle, WA to Fairbanks, AK. Here are some views from along the way:
 |
| Kettle lakes and farmland of Minnesota |
 |
| Puget Sound |
 |
| Glaciers in the Cascades, near Juneau |
 |
St. Elias Range, home of Mount Logan (19,551 ft) and Mount St. Elias (18,008 ft),
the two highest peaks in Canada, and the second and third highest peaks in North America,
after Mount McKinley (20,327 ft). |
 |
| Close-up of a thrust sheet (horizontal fault trace) with spectacular lateral and transverse fluvial systems. |
Bonus: our research team also includes Melissa Barker, a teacher from CO, who is also keeping journals and answering questions through the PolarTREC program. See her website
here.