International research in the Antarctic

書誌事項

International research in the Antarctic

Richard Fifield

Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 1987

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注記

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

The continent, seas, and atmosphere of the Antarctic constitute one of the greatest natural laboratories for modern science. The research undertaken in the Antarctic is concerned with topics as diverse as solar wind, plasma physics, radio research, ocean circulation and mixing, glaciation, climate history, weather phenomena, the study of a range of organisms (including krill, whales, fish, seals, birds, and lowly plants), the survival of life forms at low temperature, and the impact of man on a pristine environment. SCAR, the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research, was established as a direct result of the great success of the International Geophysical Year in the late 1950s. Its object is to co-ordinate effectively the research programmes of the many nations active in the region. This book is based on special reports from SCAR's many working groups.

目次

  • Introduction by Professor Jim Zumberge
  • First impressions and the setting
  • Why are scientists interested in the Antarctic?
  • First studies of the Antarctic to the Treaty
  • Logistics, transportation, and telecommunications
  • Geodesy and cartography in the Antarctic
  • Geology and Solid-Earth geophysics
  • 'Land of mountainous ice'
  • Cold waters run deep
  • Antarctic meteorology
  • Cold climates and frozen atmospheres
  • The upper atmosphere from the Antarctic
  • Marine life and the living edge of Antarctica
  • Hostile environment for mankind
  • Environmental impact of Man
  • Freedom of exchange of Antarctic scientific information
  • A continent for collaboration
  • Appendices
  • Index.

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