The
International Polar Year (or
IPY) was a collaborative, international effort researching the
polar regions.
Karl Weyprecht, an Austro-Hungarian navy officer, motivated the endeavor, but died before it first occurred in
1882-
1883. Fifty years later (
1932-
1933) a second IPY occurred. The
International Geophysical Year was inspired by the IPY and occurred 75 years after the first IPY (1957-58).
The third International Polar Year is currently in progress as of
2007, and will last until
2009. It is being sponsored by the
International Council for Science (ICSU) the
World Meteorological Organization (WMO). The chair of the
International Planning Group established within the ICSU for this event is chaired by Professor
Chris Rapley
and Dr.
Robin Bell. The Director of the IPY International Programme Office is
Dr David Carlson
.
Motivation
The polar areas have many unique phenomena. Circulatory systems for air and water reach the surface, as do the majority of the Earth's magnetic field lines. Thick glaciers have trapped air and water from ancient times. It is easiest to observe these phenomena near the poles.
Unfortunately, the poles are expensive places to visit, because they're distant, cold and deserted; infrastructure is sparse and the terrain is rough in polar regions (often consisting of ice blocks with crevasses between them). International cooperative programs share the costs and maximize the number of coordinated scientific observations. The IPY is the most famous example of such a cooperative program.
History
The
First International Polar Year
was proposed by
Georg Neumayer and inspired by an
Austro-Hungarian naval officer,
Karl Weyprecht. They argued for a coordinated scientific approach, with observers making coordinated geophysical measurements at several locations during the same year. This would permit more views of the same phenomena, allowing more valuable interpretation of the available data, with only slightly more total money.
Seven years were required to organize the collaboration. There were 12 expeditions to the
Arctic and three to the
Antarctic. Twelve nations participated: the
Austro-Hungarian Empire,
Denmark,
Finland,
France,
Germany,
the Netherlands,
Norway,
Russia,
Sweden, the
United Kingdom,
Canada and the
United States.
Tragically, 17 of the 24 Americans involved in the Arctic expedition starved to death during the first IPY of 1882-83. A supply ship was missed, leading to the disaster where several bodies were consumed by the survivors.
The aforementioned countries operated 14 meteorological stations around the North Pole. Observations included meteorology, geomagnetism, auroral phenomena, ocean currents, tides, structure and motion of ice and atmospheric electricity. More than 40 meteorological observatories around the world expanded their programs of observations for this period.
Data and images from the First International Polar Year
have very recently been made available for browsing and download on the Web. These records of the First International Polar Year offer a rare glimpse of the circumpolar Arctic environment as it existed in the past and hold the potential to improve our understanding of historical climate variability and
environmental change
in the Arctic.
Shortly after
World War I, mysterious, often defective behaviour in
telegraph,
radio and electric power and
telephone lines began to persuade engineers and scientists that the electrical geophysics of the Earth needed more study. The airplane, motorized sea and land transport and new instruments made the proposals more interesting.
In 1927 a proposal came before an International Meteorological Committee. In 1928 the committee submitted a detailed report to an international conference of directors of meteorological services at Copenhagen. Part of one of the resolutions follows:
» ... magnetic, auroral and meteorological observations at a network of stations in the Arctic and Antarctic would materially advance present knowledge and understanding (of these phenomena) not only within polar regions but in general ... This increased knowledge will be of practical application to problems connected with terrestrial magnetism, marine and aerial navigation, wireless telegraphy and weather forecasting.
The conference suggested observing in
1932–1933, the fiftieth anniversary of the First International Polar Year.
The Second Polar Year (1932–33) program studied how much observations in the polar regions could improve weather forecasts and help transport by air and sea. Forty-four nations participated, and a vast amount of data was collected. A world data center was created under the organization that eventually came to be called the
International Meteorological Organization.
By most accounts, the privations of these two early operations were extreme, with the men spending less than 10 percent of their time on science, and the rest of the time devoted to survival.
In the
1950s new instrumentation, including especially rocketry and seismography, inspired
U.S. scientist
Lloyd Berkner to propose a third Polar Year. The
International Council of Scientific Unions, a parent body, broadened the proposals from polar studies to geophysical research, renaming the effort the
International Geophysical Year (which see). More than 70 existing national scientific organizations then formed IGY committees, and participated in the cooperative effort. The IGY took place from July
1957 to December 1958.
While the IGY had taken place when the sun was at maximum output, this was followed by an examination of the sun and related geophysical phenomena at the low point in the
solar cycle, the International Year of the Quiet Sun (IQSY). This lasted from July 1963 to December 1964.
Princess Elisabeth Polar Science Station
On September 6, 2007,
Belgian-based International Polar Foundation unveiled
octagonal spaceship-like Princess Elisabeth station, the world's first zero-emissions
polar science station in
Antarctica to
research on
climate change. Costing $16.3 million, the
prefabricated station, wnich is part of International Polar Year will shipped to the
South Pole from Belgium (to monitor the
health of the
polar regions, using
icebreakers,
satellites,
stations and
submarines). Belgian polar
explorer Alain Hubert stated that "
This base will be the first of its kind to produce zero emissions, making it a unique model of how energy should be used in the Antarctic," Johan Berte is the leader of the station design team and manager of the project (which will conduct research in
climatology,
glaciology and
microbiology), and the project unified
scientists from 63 nations in 228 studies.
Commemorative Coin Controversy
The Royal Canadian Mint's $20 silver coin, launched on July 18, 2007 has evoked one of the darkest moments in the history of polar exploration and rankled Canada's main Inuit organization.
The coin was struck to mark the 125th anniversary of the International Polar Year scientific studies and features a "world first" metallic-blue finish meant to mimic the Arctic's icy hues.
On one side of the coin is the customary portrait of Queen Elizabeth; on the other, 16th-century British explorer
Martin Frobisher and a compass rose from his era, along with images of the ship he sailed in search of the fabled
Northwest Passage and an
Inuit man paddling his
kayak in ice-choked waters.
A mint spokesman said the kayaker is simply meant to represent the indigenous people of the North and their role in Arctic exploration.
However, the combination of elements recalls an infamous episode from Frobisher's 1576 voyage to Baffin Island and the tragic fate of an unnamed Inuit paddler who was lured aboard the explorer's ship,
Gabriel, and kidnapped for transport back to England as proof of the expedition's success in reaching the New World.
The Inuit captive, one of the first native North Americans known to have reached Europe, was put on circus-style display in England and became the subject of portraits, including one intended for Frobisher's sponsor,
Queen Elizabeth I, before dying --probably of pneumonia or exposure to European disease -- only weeks after arriving.
Coin Specifications
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