The National Ocean Sciences Bowl (NOSB) Professional Webinar Series is a development opportunity for middle and high school educators nationwide. All educators are welcome to register, and NOSB coaches are highly encouraged to participate.

The free online webinar series will focus on the 2021 NOSB competition theme of ‘ Plunging into Our Polar Seas.’

Each of the presenters will give a one hour live webinar presentation on their current research or topic of interest, followed by a 30 minute Q&A session.

All participants logged into the meeting will be able to listen and follow along with the presentation, as well as type questions for the presenter during the live presentation. The NOSB national office staff will read the questions to the presenter.

Questions? Please contact us at nosb@ucar.edu.

Date of Webinar: January 25, 2021 at 7 pm Eastern

Topic/Title: Going with the floe: what a year adrift in the Arctic ice pack can reveal about sea ice

The 2019-2020 Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate (MOSAiC) expedition was a year-long drift experiment in the central Arctic with the goal of better understanding how the Arctic system works: how its ocean, sea ice, atmosphere and ecosystem interact with one another throughout an entire year. Sea ice geophysicist Melinda Webster was deployed to the field campaign during one of the most transformative times of the year, from spring to autumn. This period was rich with opportunities to study the seasonal evolution of the sea ice cover as it transitioned from a cold, snow-covered icescape to a fragmented ice pack riddled with melt ponds and drifting rapidly away from the North Pole. This presentation will explain the seasonal evolution of Arctic sea ice processes and properties, how they connect to the big picture of the Arctic system and climate change, and why the combination of field data, satellite measurements, and climate model experiments is one of the most powerful tools in science.

Dr. Melinda Webster

Dr. Melinda Webster is an Assistant Professor at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. In terms of the MOSAiC expedition, Dr. Webster was most excited about the year-long time-series and seeing how everything unfolds, from start to finish, and to learn how it all fits together as an atmosphere-ice-ocean system. She knew the ever-changing environment would be a challenge. Harsh weather, ice dynamics, and instrument failure were the reality. Fortunately, she was part of a strong, highly motivated team to work through these obstacles.