Plan Anual Antártico Del Programa Antártico Argentino 2018-2019
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Ilha Rei George, Antártica Marítima) Entre 1986 E 2011
Revista Brasileira de Meteorologia, v.29, n.3, 379 - 388, 2014 http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/0102-778620120439 VARIAÇÕES DA FRENTE DA GELEIRA POLAR CLUB, PENÍNSULA POTTER (ILHA REI GEORGE, ANTÁRTICA MARÍTIMA) ENTRE 1986 E 2011 EVERTON LUÍS POELKING1, ANDRÉ MEDEIROS DE ANDRADE2, GONÇALO BRITO T. G. VIEIRA3, CARLOS ERNESTO G. R. SCHAEFER4, ELPÍDIO INÁCIO FERNANDES FILHO4 1Universidade Federal do Recôncavo da Bahia (UFRB), Cruz das Almas, BA, Brasil 2Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Porto Alegre, RS, Brasil 3Universidade de Lisboa (UL), Lisboa, Portugal 4Universidade Federal de Viçosa (UFV), Viçosa, MG, Brasil [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], elpidio@ufv. br Recebido Fevereiro de 2012 - Aceito Novembro de 2013 RESUMO As mudanças ambientais, especialmente na criosfera, podem resultar em amplas consequências globais, sendo o estudo de geleiras das regiões polares estratégicos para analisar áreas sensíveis às mudanças climáticas. Neste trabalho foram analisadas as taxas de mudança da frente da geleira Polar Club e comparadas com a variabilidade interanual da temperatura do ar, na Península Potter, ilha Rei George, a fim de compreender o impacto direto das alterações do clima local na dinâmica das áreas livres de gelo. Foi utilizada uma série de dez cenas de imagens do satélite Landsat e dados de temperatura do ar superficial entre 1986 e 2011. Os resultados evidenciam uma tendência no aumento na temperatura do ar de 0,04 ºC por ano, o que resultou no incremento de 1,03 ºC nas temperaturas médias do ar para o período de 26 anos analisados. -
Memoria Antártica Nacional Campaña Antártica 2014-2015 Santiago Diciembre De 2015 Presentación Del Ministro De Relaciones Exteriores
Memoria Antártica Nacional Campaña Antártica 2014-2015 Santiago Diciembre de 2015 Presentación del Ministro de Relaciones Exteriores Sr. Heraldo Muñoz Valenzuela El 16 de diciembre de 2014, el Consejo de Política Antártica, que tengo el honor de presidir, reunido en Punta Arenas, entregó un mandato a las instituciones antárticas nacionales para la elaboración de una Memoria Antártica Nacional. El documento que presentamos, compilación inédita de las tareas que se desarrollan anualmente en ese continente, da cumplimiento a dicho mandato. El quehacer antártico nacional involucra a un amplio espectro de instituciones, las que destinan personas y recursos a la ejecución de las tareas que nuestra legislación les confiere. Cada una de estas entidades cumple un papel fundamental en el logro de los objetivos establecidos en la Política Antártica Nacional, documento rector de nuestros trabajos. El Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, en su rol de coordinador de la Política Antártica Nacional, ha enfatizado la difusión hacia la ciudadanía de la labor que las instituciones nacionales realizan en ese continente. Junto con describir de manera general las perspectivas que se abren para los intereses nacionales en este ámbito, este documento resalta los profundos vínculos históricos, geográficos y políticos que desde los inicios de nuestra historia patria nos unen con la Antártica. Al presentar esta primera Memoria Anual, es oportuno recordar el destacado papel de Chile durante las negociaciones del Tratado Antártico, instrumento internacional que cumplirá 55 años de vigencia en 2016, a través de sus delegados Marcial Mora, Enrique Gallardo y Julio Escudero; así como durante la evolución de las cuestiones antárticas en el ámbito multilateral, gracias a figuras como Oscar Pinochet de la Barra y Jorge Berguño. -
Desde La Filosofía Antártica : Campaña Antártica De Verano 2010-2011 : Base Primavera
Desde la filosofía antártica Campaña Antártica de Verano 2010-2011 BASE PRIMAVERA Diego R. González Zevallos González Zevallos, Diego Ricardo Desde la filosofía antártica : Campaña Antártica de Verano 2010-2011 : Base Primavera . - 1a ed. - Puerto Madryn : el autor, 2013. E-Book. ISBN 978-987-33-3485-6 1. Aves Marinas. I. Título CDD 598.176 Fecha de catalogación: 27/05/2013 Desde la filosofía antártica Campaña Antártica de Verano 2010-2011 BASE PRIMAVERA Diego R. González Zevallos Diseño y diagramación: D.I. Jimena M. Esteves I. - Estudio Trazos - 0280 154696773 5 CONTENIDOS CONTENIDOS PRÓLOGO 8 CAPíTULO I 12 Ciencia, cultura y sociedad 13 CAPíTULO II 16 Contexto antártico 17 El rol de las Fuerzas Armadas 17 Solo un par de artículos mencionados en la Ley 18513 19 Conociendo a otro argentino…un tal Pujato 19 CAPíTULO III 22 Relatos y vivencias antárticas 23 CAPíTULO IV 76 Reflexiones finales 77 ANEXO I 84 Publicaciones y presentaciones hasta el momento… 85 Presentación a Congreso 85 Informe Técnico 85 Publicación en revista de divulgación 85 Publicación en revista científica 85 ANEXO II 94 La Antártida dos siglos atrás 95 Algunas pautas de comportamiento ambiental 106 Bases Antárticas Argentinas 107 ANEXO III 110 El kril 111 Definición 111 Importancia 112 Distribución 112 Ciclo de vida 113 Usos 113 Pesquería 114 El cierre de las pesquerías de kril en el Hemisferio Norte 115 ANEXO IV 116 Un anexo casi emperador… 116 AGRADECIMIENTOS 124 Acerca del autor 126 7 A mi viejo… 9 PRÓLOGO PRÓLOGO Nada más sencillo que conocer un lugar profundamente anhelado. Al mismo tiempo que desembarqué en esta tierra helada y comencé mi labor científica, decidí redactar mí día a día. -
The Antarctic Treaty Cm 8841
The Antarctic Treaty Measures adopted at the Thirty-sixth Consultative Meeting held at Brussels, 20 – 29 May 2013 Presented to Parliament by the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs by Command of Her Majesty March 2014 Cm 8841 © Crown copyright 2014 You may re-use this information (excluding logos) free of charge in any format or medium, under the terms of the Open Government Licence v.2. To view this licence visit www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/2/ or email [email protected] This publication is available at www.gov.uk/government/publications Any enquiries regarding this publication should be sent to us at Treaty Section, Foreign and Commo nwealth Office, King Charles Street, London, SW1A 2AH Print ISBN 9781474101134 Web ISBN 9781474101141 Printed in the UK by the Williams Lea Group on behalf of the Controller of Her Majesty’s Stationery Office ID P002631486 03/14 Printed on paper containing 30% recycled fibre content minimum MEASURES ADOPTED AT THE THIRTY-SIXTH ANTARCTIC TREATY CONSULTATIVE MEETING Brussels, Belgium, 20-29 May 2013 The Measures1 adopted at the Thirty-sixth Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting are reproduced below from the Final Report of the Meeting. In accordance with Article IX, paragraph 4, of the Antarctic Treaty, the Measures adopted at Consultative Meetings become effective upon approval by all Contracting Parties whose representatives were entitled to participate in the meeting at which they were adopted (i.e. all the Consultative Parties). The full text of the Final Report of the Meeting, including the Decisions and Resolutions adopted at that Meeting and colour copies of the maps found in this command paper, is available on the website of the Antarctic Treaty Secretariat at www.ats.aq/documents. -
1 Inhabiting the Antarctic Jessica O'reilly & Juan Francisco Salazar
Inhabiting the Antarctic Jessica O’Reilly & Juan Francisco Salazar Introduction The Polar Regions are places that are part fantasy and part reality.1 Antarctica was the last continent to be discovered (1819–1820) and the only landmass never inhabited by indigenous people.2 While today thousands of people live and work there at dozens of national bases, Antarctica has eluded the anthropological imagination. In recent years, however, as anthropology has turned its attention to extreme environments, scientific field practices, and ethnographies of global connection and situated globalities, Antarctica has become a fitting space for anthropological analysis and ethnographic research.3 The idea propounded in the Antarctic Treaty System—that Antarctica is a place of science, peace, environmental protection, and international cooperation—is prevalent in contemporary representations of the continent. Today Antarctic images are negotiated within a culture of global environmentalism and international science. Historians, visual artists, and journalists who have spent time in the Antarctic have provided rich accounts of how these principles of global environmentalism and 1 See for instance Adrian Howkins, The Polar Regions: An Environmental History (Cambridge, UK: Polity, 2016). 2 Archaeological records have shown evidence of human occupation of Patagonia and the South American sub-Antarctic region (42˚S to Cape Horn 56˚S) dating back to the Pleistocene–Holocene transition (13,000–8,000 years before present). The first human inhabitants south of 60˚S were British, United States, and Norwegian whalers and sealers who originally settled in Antarctic and sub-Antarctic islands during the early 1800s, often for relatively extended periods of time, though never permanently 3 See for instance Jessica O’Reilly, The Technocratic Antarctic: An Ethnography of Scientific Expertise and Environmental Governance (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2017); Juan Francisco Salazar, “Geographies of Place-making in Antarctica: An Ethnographic Approach,” The Polar Journal 3, no. -
Multi-Year Analysis of Distributed Glacier Mass Balance Modelling and Equilibrium Line Altitude on King George Island, Antarctic Peninsula
The Cryosphere, 12, 1211–1232, 2018 https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-12-1211-2018 © Author(s) 2018. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. Multi-year analysis of distributed glacier mass balance modelling and equilibrium line altitude on King George Island, Antarctic Peninsula Ulrike Falk1,2, Damián A. López2,3, and Adrián Silva-Busso4,5 1Climate Lab, Institute for Geography, Bremen University, Bremen, Germany 2Center for Remote Sensing of Land Surfaces (ZFL), Bonn University, Bonn, Germany 3Institute of Geology and Mineralogy, University Cologne, Cologne, Germany 4Faculty of Exact and Natural Sciences, University Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina 5Instituto Nacional de Agua (INA), Ezeiza, Buenos Aires, Argentina Correspondence: Ulrike Falk ([email protected]) Received: 12 October 2017 – Discussion started: 1 December 2017 Revised: 15 March 2018 – Accepted: 19 March 2018 – Published: 10 April 2018 Abstract. The South Shetland Islands are located at the seen over the course of the 5-year model run period. The win- northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula (AP). This region ter accumulation does not suffice to compensate for the high was subject to strong warming trends in the atmospheric sur- variability in summer ablation. The results are analysed to as- face layer. Surface air temperature increased about 3K in sess changes in meltwater input to the coastal waters, specific 50 years, concurrent with retreating glacier fronts, an in- glacier mass balance and the equilibrium line altitude (ELA). crease in melt areas, ice surface lowering and rapid break- The Fourcade Glacier catchment drains into Potter cove, has up and disintegration of ice shelves. -
Anta272.Txt F*************************************************************************** * W.A.P
anta272.txt f*************************************************************************** * W.A.P. Worldwide Antarctic Program * * Antarctic, Sub-Antarctic and Peri-Antarctic News * * SINCE 1979 * * * * Bases, Activities and Informations for * * Amateur Radio Stations and Antarctic Enthusiasts * * Bulletin nr.272 (24 February 2017) * * * * WAP Antarctic Bulletin is a free of charge information sheet * * edited by Max IK1GPG, Gianni I1HYW and Betty IK1QFM @ WAP Staff * * * * WEB Page : http://www.waponline.it/ * * * * * * Others Antarctic WEB Pages with our WAP Bulletin * * http://www.qsl.net/f5nod/antarctica.html * * * * Antarctica Mailing List * * http://groups.yahoo.com/group/antarctica_list/ * ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- * W.A.P. Special Edition * * 22 issues are available at WAP web site !! * * We are waiting volounteers to continue the Monthly Issues pubblication * * Those interested to do this work for free, PSE contact IK1GPG or I1HYW * ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- * W.A.P. - W.A.D.A. (Worked Antarctic Directory Award) * * Antarctic, Sub-Antarctic and Peri-Antarctic Directory * * (16th Edition - Release 1.29 - 04 January 2017) * * List of more than 873 Bases, Camp, Hut, Refuge and Station used in * * Antarctica since 1945. * * * * W.A.P. - W.A.C.A. (Worked Antarctic Callsigns Award) * * Antarctic, Sub-Antarctic and Peri-Antarctic Directory * * (16th Edition - Release 1.29 - 04 January 2017) * * List of more than 4.076 Callsigns used -
Boletín Antártico Venezolano
2 Consejo Directivo Ediciones IVIC Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Comisión Editorial Científicas (IVIC) Coordinador Director Eloy Sira Eloy Sira Horacio Biord Subdirector Jesús Eloy Conde Alexander Briceño María Teresa Curcio G. Rafael Gassón Representantes del Ministerio del Poder Pamela Navarro Popular para Educación Universitaria, Ciencia Héctor Suárez y Tecnología Erika Wagner Guillermo Barreto Luther Rodríguez José Vicente Montoya © Ediciones IVIC Instituto Venezolano de Investigaciones Gerencia General Científicas (IVIC) Martha Velásquez RIF G-20004206-0 Centro de Oceanología y Estudios Antárticos (COEA-IVIC) Boletín Antártico Venezolano. 16 años de Jefe de Centro Venezuela en la Antártida Eloy Sira Corrección de estilo, redacción Subjefe y coordinador científico y coordinación editorial: Juan A. Alfonso María Teresa Curcio G. y Pamela Navarro Secretaria ejecutiva Diseño y arte final: Patty Álvarez Marie Indjayan Agradecimientos: Pascual Estrada, Esteban Coordinadora de gestión ambiental Pérez, Vanessa Ortiz y Grisel Velásquez Helga Handt Depósito legal: lf66020166001517 Representante del Ministerio del Poder Popular para la Educación Universitaria, Altos de Pipe, Venezuela Ciencia y Tecnología 2016 Juan Pablo Quintero Representante del Ministerio del Poder Popular para las Relaciones Exteriores Cita recomendada Rubén Darío Molina Para la obra completa: Representante del Ministerio del Poder Centro de Oceanología y Estudios Antárticos Popular para la Defensa (COEA-IVIC) (ed.) (2016) Boletín Antártico CA Jhony Vera Venezolano. -
Newsletter #04 Nov. 2017
International Coordination Office (ICO) Find more information at of the Polar Preditction Project www.polarprediction.net PolarPredictNews Newsletter #04 Nov. 2017 Oracadas Base on South Orkney Islands (see news item #07 this issue; photo: Gustavo Siles) Dear Colleagues! terms of observations. Feedback from the com- 01 munity on how to improve the YOPP Observations / It is my pleasure to welcome you to the fourth Layer would be much appreciated. 10 issue of PolarPredictNews. Among others, this latest issue provides you with a brief report from Finally, I would like to point out two important the first YOPP Online Conference. I thought that milestones in terms of user-engagement this event was important, given some interesting highlighted in this issue—namely the establish- and valuable discussion and suggestions from the ment of the platform “Polar Prediction Matters” participants. A link to the recording of this event and publication of the scoping document entitled is provided in this newsletter; and I would like to “Navigating Weather, Water, Ice and Climate”, invite you to join us on 1 December 2017 for the which is a high-level document discussing rese- second YOPP Online Conference. arch needs in relation to the use and provision of environmental forecast in the Arctic and Antarctic. Another important element, described in this issue of PolarPredictNews, is the development of Happy reading, the YOPP Observations Layer, which allows you to Thomas Jung check who will be doing what, when and where in The Year of Polar Prediction (YOPP) is a major international activity that has been initiated by World Mete- orological Organization’s World Weather Research Programme (WWRP) as a key component of the Polar Prediction Project (PPP). -
Journal Officiel
République Française Liberté - Égalité - Fraternité Terres australes et antarctiques françaises ISSN 1292-802X JOURNAL OFFICIEL DES TERRES AUSTRALES ET ANTARCTIQUES FRANÇAISES N° 52 (4ème trimestre 2011) 31 décembre 2011 - Journal officiel des Terres australes et antarctiques françaises n° 52 SOMMAIRE ACTES EMANANT D’AUTORITÉS AUTRES QUE LE PRÉFET, ADMINISTRATEUR SUPÉRIEUR 5 Loi n° 2011-1843 du 8 décembre 2011 relative aux certificats d'obtention végétale ...................................................... 5 Décret n° 2011-1612 du 22 novembre 2011 relatif aux première, deuxième, troisième et quatrième parties réglementaires du code général de la propriété des personnes publiques ........................................................................ 5 Décret n° 2011-2023 du 29 décembre 2011 relatif aux pouvoirs de contrôle et de sanction de la Commission nationale de l'informatique et des libertés ....................................................................................................................... 5 Décret n° 2011-2108 du 30 décembre 2011 portant organisation de la surveillance de la navigation maritime ............. 5 Arrêté du 24 octobre 2011 modifiant l'arrêté du 21 septembre 2007 portant règlement pour l'assistance météorologique à la navigation aérienne ......................................................................................................................... 8 Arrêté du 28 octobre 2011 modifiant l'arrêté du 5 septembre 2008 relatif aux états dans lesquels peut se trouver une aide radio à la navigation -
Passenger Logbook: Expedition Antarctica
Logbook HAN 1601 Expedition Antarctica The World’s Southernmost Nursery USHUAIA – USHUAIA 10th – 28th January 2016 aboard MS HANSEATIC South Georgia Island (Mount Paget is the rounded dome on the left, Grytviken is hidden out of sight in a harbor; photo January 2014). Text: Richard MacDonald Photographs: Richard MacDonald & lecturer staff “One hand for the boat.” 2 MS HANSEATIC MS Hanseatic anchored New Island, Falkland Islands, 12 January 2016. Built: March 1993 Registered Port: Nassau Flag: Bahamas Weight: 8,378 GRT Overall length: 122.80 m/403 ft Beam: 18 m/59 ft Draught: 4.91 m/16 ft Main Engines: 2 MAK 8M453 C 2 x 2,940 kW 2 Propellers CP, 300 cm Speed: 16 knots Complement: 171 passengers 125 officers and crew 3 DECK & ENGINE CREW Ship’s Officers Captain: Thilo Natke Chief Officer: Nicole Schnell Chief Engineer: Giulio Vlacic Hotel Manager: Doris Adler Maître d’hôtel: Mirko Kirchhöfer Ship’s Surgeon: Dr. Ursula Bellut Chief Purser: Hendrik Fongern Chief Chef: Udo Grigas Pianist Magdelena Majerovả The shore party prepares to greet the first Zodiac of passengers landing at Whaler’s Bay, Deception Island, Antarctica. 4 HOTEL & EXPEDITION STAFF Cruise Director: Ulrike Schleifenbaum Hostess: Bettina Schlennstedt Cruise Sales Birgit Volberg Zodiac driver: Claas Stanko Expedition Leader: Dr. Arne Kertelhein Lecturer (climate & glaciology): Dr. Gerit Birnbaum Lecturer (geology): Heike Fries Lecturer (polar history): Dr. Arne Kertelhein Lecturer (polar history): Dr. Hans-Joachim “HaJo” Lauenstein Lecturer (biology): Richard MacDonald Lecturer (biology): Sylvia Stevens Your Expedition Lecturer Team for Hanseatic Cruise 1601 (from left to right): Sylvia Stevens, Gerit Birnbaum, Heike Fries, HaJo Lauenstein, Richard MacDonald, and Arne Kertelhein. -
National Report, Argentina V2
IHO Hydrographic Committee on Antarctica (HCA) th 16 Meeting, Prague, Czech Republic. 3 -5 July 2019. REPORT BY THE NAVAL HYDROGRAPHIC SERVICE MINISTERIO DE DEFENSA SERVICIO DE HIDROGRAFIA NAVAL Tel.: (54-11) 4301-0061/67 Fax.: (54-11) 4301-3883 Av. Montes de Oca 2124 www.hidro.gob.ar (C1270ABV) Buenos Aires REPUBLICA ARGENTINA 1- HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE MINISTERIO DE DEFENSA SERVICIO DE HIDROGRAFÍA NAVAL www.hidro.gob.ar 2- SURVEYS 2.1 INT 9101 / H-757– Península Trinidad – Base Esperanza. 6 (six) WGS84 points and coast line were measured in Esperanza Bay for the realization of INT 9101. 2.2 H-711 – Potter Cove – Carlini Base. 8 (eight) WGS84 points and coast line were measured in Potter Cove for future actualization of H-711. 3- NEW CHARTS & UPDATES 3.1 New Charts 3.1.1 AR-GB INT 9153 / H-734 “Church Point a Cabo Longing”, Published in September 2018. INT9153/H-734 Boundaries Scale North Latitude 63° 39’S “Church Point a Cabo South Latitude 64° 36.4’S 1:50.000 Longing” West Longitude 59° 00’W East Longitude 55° 17.6’W 3.1.2 AR-GB INT 9154 / H-733 “Isla Joinville a Cabo Ducorps”. Published in September, 2018. INT 9154 / H-733 Boundaries Scale North Latitude 62° 50’S “Isla Joinville a Cabo South Latitude 63° 49.1’S 1:50.000 Ducorps” West Longitude 58° 12.5’W East Longitude 54° 30’W 3.2 New Updates 3.2.1 H-7 “Provincia de Tierra del Fuego, Antártida e Islas del Atlántico Sur, Península Antártica”.