A number of our expeditions involve exploration of the Arctic. Below are some past expeditions featured on this website that have taken place in the Arctic.
September-October 2019: From September 19-October 16, a team of oceanographers participated in a voyage of discovery to explore in detail for the first time a hydrothermal vent field in the Arctic Ocean.
Read moreIn March 2016, a University of Maine-led team conducted the first-ever deepwater exploration of one of the great fjord systems of the world, Glacier Bay National Park, using both diver-based surveys and a remotely operated vehicle.
Read moreIn 2016, an exploration team sailed north of Alaska, to investigate the relationship between the sea ice, pelagic (water column), and benthic (ocean bottom) communities.
Read moreThis expedition was the ninth year that Russian-American Long-term Census of the Arctic (RUSALCA) scientists conducted long-term research to better understand the causes and consequences of environmental change in the fragile Arctic environment.
Read moreThe 2009 Russian-American Long-term Census of the Arctic (RUSALCA) mission set sail from Nome, Alaska, on the Russian Research Vessel Professor Khromov for a voyage into the Bering Strait and northwards to the Pacific side of the Arctic Ocean.
Read moreIn 2005, an international team of 45 scientists from the United States, Canada, China, and Russia participated in a collaborative effort to explore the frigid depths of the Canada Basin, located in one of the deepest parts of the Arctic Ocean.
Read moreThis 2004 expedition marked the first time scientists from both Russia and the United States worked together under the Russian-American Long-term Census of the Arctic (RUSALCA), beginning a collaborative journey of exploration and research in the Arctic.
Read moreDuring the summer of 2002, NOAA and several partners undertook an expedition in the Canada Basin.
Read moreThe above items are only a selection of the educational materials highlighting the Arctic on our website.
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