What Are They Doing?

Growth rings, also known as trees rings or annual rings, are annual layers of tree growth that can be seen when looking at the cross section of a tree trunk. Looking at the rings, you can determine the age of the tree by counting the rings. By looking at rings, you can also study the response of the tree to environmental conditions like a really dry or wet year. The study of tree rings is called dendrochronology.

The research team studied mostly white spruce trees on the North Slope of Alaska. They collected samples from the boreal forest and further north around the tree line (the place too far north for trees to grow). They collected samples by coring trees, taking tree measurements, and recording observations about the environment around the trees.

Using this study, the research team looked at environmental conditions of the past and tried to determine which conditions have the greatest impacts on tree growth. The records were compared to similar data from around the entire arctic to better understand the response of boreal forests to changes in seasonality.

Where Are They?

The team camped and conducted their research in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) in the Firth River area, in northeastern Alaska. The Arctic Refuge is the largest National Wildlife Refuge, consisting of around 19,000,000 acres. It was established for many reasons, including the conservation and preservation of over 300 wildlife species, to fulfill international treaty obligations, and to provide opportunities for continued subsistence uses. Inupiat Eskimo and Gwich’in Indian peoples primarily inhabit the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. To arrive at their field site, the research team chartered a flight on a small plane into their field site.

Latest Journals

It’s been 9 ½ months since we sampled the White Spruce trees near Mancha Creek. During that time the samples have been stored at the Tree Ring Lab at the Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory near New York City. The cores taken from live trees and the ‘cookies’, slabs taken from ‘sub-fossilized’ (aka…
What does a PolarTREC teacher do when they have 10 days to fill in Alaska between expeditions? The hardest part of this question is deciding just where to spend those days. I chose to explore South-Central Alaska and headed down to the Kenai Peninsula with my husband to explore the world of…
We're back in Fairbanks where the electrons flow like water (or, perhaps, just like electrons!) from that funny little thing that is attached to the wall of my dormitory room here at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks campus. Today is a day for drying and re-packing gear, catching up and updating…
It's a beautiful evening as I sit on here on the gravel at the edge of Mancha Creek. I'd include a picture for you, but it takes too many of those precious electrons to download pictures from my camera, sort and prepare them, and send them off through the ether. So you'll have to use your own…
Dates
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Location
ANWR, Alaska
Susy Ellison - Teacher
Teacher
Yampah Mountain High School

Susy Ellison has taught science at the small, public alternative Yampah Mountain High School in Glenwood Springs, Colorado, for many years. Ms. Ellison's days are filled with designing and teaching physical, earth, and life science classes that engage the minds and hearts of her students. In 2010, the National Environmental Education Foundation honored Ms. Ellison as the recipient of their Richard C. Bartlett Environmental Education Award. Ms. Ellison's students have been and continue to be challenged to include environmental literacy into their lives. Her students have worked on many projects to meet this demand, including helping to design and build an energy-efficient strawbale building, installing solar panels on the school's roof, and building a greenhouse. Her students have also studied snow science in the Colorado backcountry and backpacked in the canyons of Utah studying desert ecology. In her free time, Ms. Ellison can be found outside, exploring the nooks and crannies of mountain, desert, and river environments. She resides in Carbondale, Colorado in a solar-powered home that she built with her husband.

Rosanne DArrigo - Researcher
Researcher
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory

Rosanne D'Arrigo is a Lamont Research Professor and Associate Director of the Biology and Paleo Environment Department at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. Her current research is in the Tree-Ring Research Laboratory, where scientists are dedicated to expanding the use and application of tree-ring research around the world to improve understanding of past climate and environmental history. Dr. D'Arrigo has been involved with educational outreach for many years via annual open houses, exhibits, and seminars. Learn more about Dr. D'Arrigo and her work at her faculty webpage.

Kevin Anchukaitis - Researcher
Researcher
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory

Kevin Anchukaitis is an Assistant Research Professor in the Biology and Paleo Environment Department at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. He works in the Tree-Ring Laboratory, and his research focuses on developing and interpreting high-resolution proxy records of climate variability. To learn more about Dr. Anchukaitis, please visit his webpage.

Forest Response to Arctic Environmental Change Resources

An article describing Kevin Anchukaitis' work at the Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory. Tree rings embody a record of climate change going back thousands of years, and they grow on every continent except Antarctica. “They let us reconstruct climate around the world, in both space and time."

Article
Arctic
High school and Up
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Article describing PolarTREC teacher Susy Ellison's recent expeditions to Alaska to take part in a tree ring study in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and an archaeological expedition in Kivalina.

Article
Arctic
All Aged
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