Sentinel of global warming
The Arctic is a polar region of 16.5 million km² located in the northernmost part of Earth. It comprises the North Pole at the center of the Arctic Ocean, whose surface is 5 times the size of the Mediterranean Sea. The weather limit of the Arctic is defined by a 10°C isotherm in July, the threshold below which trees no longer grow. Its geographic limit is the Arctic Circle.
This part of the world is warming up 3 times faster than elsewhere. Its ice floe, a thin layer of salt water ice, is gradually disappearing. Nearly 3 meters thick in the 70s-80s, it is now on average only 1 meter.
Every summer, this layer of ice melts by half to cover only 1/3 of this ocean in September. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports that there will be practically no more sea ice at the end of summer by 2045 as a result of ongoing dynamics.
We are probably the last generation to still have a chance to protect this region and know the unique marine biodiversity it hosts.
- 70 % of the volume of pack ice has disappeared in 40 years
- 4 000 m deep of the Arctic Ocean
- 6 months of polar night per year
- 10 km per day drift of sea ice
The Tara Ocean Foundation was already a pioneer in 2007
In 2007, the schooner Tara has been the first sailboat to venture into the North Pole’s extreme conditions for more than a century. It followed in the wake of the Fram, which dared the adventure in 1893. This first expedition reported on climate change and the raw beauty of this little-known environment.
The Arctic, a little-known region and an indicator of the climate crisis
The Arctic is at the forefront in terms of effects of the climate crisis. Temperatures at the surface of the pack ice are increasing twice as fast as elsewhere in the world on average. The impacts on this environment are already observable: reduction in ice cover, alteration of ice quality, higher absorption of solar energy, melting permafrost, and increased humidity in the air.
The objective of the Tara Ocean Foundation’s mission is to document and understand the dynamics of these transformations, objectify scientific data and identify the wealth of local biodiversity. The requirements and adversity of this extreme and dynamic environment have never allowed scientists to carry out year-round research at the heart of the polar pack ice. This will be the mission of the Tara Polar Station’s crews.
Tara’s Polar Station project marks the beginning of a new scientific exploration that will last more than 20 years at the heart of the Arctic Ocean.
Exploration fields are very broad since the Arctic is rich and under-researched: the migration of marine organisms to the Arctic and its evolution, atmospheric chemistry, the impact of climate change on the functioning of Arctic ecosystems, research in biotechnology, biomedicine or on the adaptation of life in extreme conditions.
This future knowledge provides hope for a better understanding and thus preserving of the Arctic ecosystem, but also elsewhere. All of this multidisciplinary research, carried out by the world’s largest research centers, aims to refine the IPCC’s climate models.
A drifting polar station in the Arctic
Tara Polar Station
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Tara Arctic
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At the heart of the Arctic Ocean, Tara is the northernmost sailboat in history
The young Tara team and CNRS researchers embarked in 2006 on an unprecedented human and scientific adventure: drifting with sea ice across the Arctic Ocean for 18 months in the wake of Nansen’s Fram, and conducting scientific research on climate change in collaboration with the European Commission.
Tara Oceans
Analysis in progress
First sailboat to circumnavigate the Arctic Ocean in one season
For the first time in history, Tara and the researchers of the Tara Oceans expedition were able to observe plankton biodiversity in Russian and Canadian Arctic and compare it with other ocean ecosystems. They discovered that this biodiversity is unique, endemic to the Arctic and so precious to humanity.
But also…
Journey to the heart of the pack ice
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Upwelling phenomenon in the Benguela Current with Emma Rocke, lead scientist aboard the schooner Tara
At the heart of dynamic ocean structures: portrait of Rémi Laxenaire, lead scientist aboard the schooner Tara
[COP27] United Nations Conference on Climate Change: 3 expectations of Tara Ocean Foundation
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