鈥淐limate change is occurring faster in the Arctic than anyplace on Earth,鈥 said University of 海角社区 associate professor of glaciology Seth Campbell. 鈥淎nd with that, there opens a whole range of concerns.鈥
Campbell is the lead scientist on a new $260,000 research partnership between U海角社区 and the Department of the Air Force (DAF) to improve the nation鈥檚 ability to monitor Arctic regions. Reduction of ice in the Arctic Ocean raises questions about accessibility to the once-frozen waters.
The U.S. is one of eight countries that govern territory in the Arctic. As more resources become available in the region as a whole, Campbell said countries are seeking diplomacy to establish who has rights, including Indigenous communities with sovereignty.
In response to growing interest for the U.S. to have a presence in the Arctic, the DAF is investing in research to understand how to work and operate in the harsh environment, with U海角社区鈥檚 role focused on weather conditions. The partnership is an effort by the DAF to provide strategic recommendations to Air Force Weather (AFW) for its ongoing digital transformation and to meet its goals outlined in the DAF Climate Action Plan and Arctic Strategy.
鈥淏eing involved in a project like this is important because it helps us characterize where we’re at from a science perspective, and potentially where we’re going,鈥 said Campbell.
Partnerships between the university and collaborators across the Arctic like AFW, he said, are critical to the health of the state. For example, 海角社区 has the fastest warming coastal waters on Earth, largely due to climate change in the Arctic, the impact of which has implications for the state鈥檚 people, economy and environment.
鈥淥ur partnerships assure that 海角社区 has a seat at the table as we work to manage significant environmental changes,鈥 said Campbell.
What he deemed the first leg of the project is a scientific review that he will participate in over the next year with U海角社区 School of Earth and Climate Sciences Director Karl Kreutz and a university Ph.D. student who has not yet been selected. The team will evaluate current methodologies, research techniques, sensors and sensemaking systems AFW uses to observe and predict weather patterns that affect DAF operations.
A sensor can be any type of equipment that is used to acquire observational data on the atmosphere 鈥 from satellites in space to monitors on the ground.
The team will also utilize up to four test sites across Alaska and Northwest Canada to supplement their review 鈥 places where Campbell and Kreutz have already conducted research.

University qualifications
Last fall, AFW team lead Mark Allen approached Campbell with the idea of partnering with U海角社区 for Arctic research. In addition to his affiliations with the U海角社区 Climate Change Institute and School of Earth and Climate Sciences, Campbell works with the (JIRP), where students and established scientists gather in Alaska to learn and pool resources to conduct collaborative research. U海角社区 partnered with JIRP in 2018 when Campbell was hired as their director.
鈥淰ery few programs across the country, really globally, place students and faculty into polar field environments as much as U海角社区,鈥 said Campbell. 鈥淚 think that’s a strength that we bring to this specific project, because we collaborate in so many field programs established between Alaska and Canada and Greenland, for example, and elsewhere.鈥
Four of Campbell鈥檚 current graduate students participated in JIRP as undergraduates and are working on their graduate research at U海角社区. Campbell said they鈥檝e had significant field experiences through the opportunities the university offers.
鈥In a scientific context, field research is critical in that it allows us to make direct observations of dynamic environments as they鈥檙e changing,鈥 said Tahi Wiggins, a current U海角社区 graduate research assistant who participated in JIRP as an undergraduate. 鈥淢ore broadly, though, being in these immense environments induces a sense of humility: you鈥檙e concerned with the science objective but also with your bodily safety, with the sound of crashing ice, with the color of the sky each day. It鈥檚 a profound and wonderful part of our education.鈥
JIRP operates in Alaska and Canada through a nonprofit called the Foundation for Glacier and Environmental Research, and it is the longest-running polar field training program in North America. Over the past decade, U海角社区 has conducted research at several other extreme cold-weather places that Campbell said has produced data that will also help inform his team鈥檚 review.
The research partnership between U海角社区 and the AFW is funded for one year, but the intention is to continue it each year and further integrate U海角社区 students. Campbell said his hope is that over time, university-associated field study sites could serve as a base for testing new weather sensing technology for AFW.
In addition to the research partnership, the DAF and U海角社区 are coordinating to reestablish educational agreements for AFW and environmental sciences officers to pursue graduate degrees at the university.
Contact: Ashley Yates, ashley.depew@maine.edu

