Abstract: An unbiased institutional body working as an overseer and comprising of a legislative organ to construct and modulate strong political frameworks and agendas that demand sustainable approach in the exploration and exploitation of the rare and precious resources of the Polar Region is the need of the hour.
The author is Professor of Geopolitics at Royal Holloway, University of London and Editor of The Geographical Journal. His latest book is The Antarctic : A Very Short Introduction (Oxford University Press 2012). Email: K.Dodds@rhul.ac.uk
Monitoring from space, aerial and in situ platforms in coastal regions will help develop models for interactions between ecological and anthropogenic processes, helping sustainable management of coast...
The Indian coasts hold diverse geomorphological features—mudflats, rocky shores, cliffs, sandy beaches and deltaic reaches that shelter unique ecosystems. However, significant sections of the coastlin...
Integrated Flood Warning System (IFLOWS) is an integrated GIS-based decision support system developed for Chennai and Mumbai that provides flood inundation scenarios and helps state governments to put...
The Indian coastline sustains unique habitats that are subjected to increasing anthropogenic stressors. The National Centre for Coastal Research (NCCR), engaged in addressing coastal concerns over thr...
A large depression produced by thawing of a huge area of very thick and exceedingly ice-rich permafrost. The sides of an alas are smooth and slippery, hence making navigation difficult. Found in both the Arctic and the Antarctic region.
German for ‘ice on top’, it is a sheet-like mass of layered ice that forms from successive flows of ground water during freezing temperature. Aufeis accumulates in the winters along stream and river valleys in Arctic and subarctic regions.
The crevasse usually formed where glaciers located in armchair like depressions - cirque, moves away from the head wall which may be the solid rock of a mountain slope or a stable glacier.
Alternate bands of light and dark on a glacier, usually found below steep narrow icefalls as the possible result of different flow and ablation rates between summer and winter. Not all icefalls however have band ogives below them.
A nunatak is an exposed, often rocky element of a ridge, mountain, or peak not covered with ice or snow within an ice field or glacier. Nunataks present readily identifiable landmark reference points in glaciers or ice caps and are often named.
An area of open water in pack or sea ice, polynyas may be kept open by constant winds or upwelling of water and so tend to recur in the same location year after year. They are particularly important for wildlife as they allow mammals such as whales and seals to have a breathing hole.
Paleoclimatology (also palaeoclimatology) is the study of changes in climate taken on the scale of the entire history of Earth. It uses a variety of proxy variables to obtain data previously preserved within (e.g.) rocks, sediments, ice sheets, tree rings, corals, shells and microfossils.
The Bellingshausen Sea is an area along the west side of the Antarctic Peninsula, west of Alexander Island, east of Cape Flying Fish on Thurston Island, and south of Peter Island. Bellingshausen Sea has an area of 487,000 km2 and reaches a maximum depth of 4,470 meters.
Permafrost is the soil which has been at or below 0°C for more than two years. Ice is not always present, as may be in the case of nonporous bedrock, but it frequently occurs and it may be in amounts exceeding the potential hydraulic saturation of the ground material.
Arctic haze is the phenomenon of a visible reddish-brown haze in the atmosphere at high latitudes in the Arctic due to air pollution. Due to limited amounts of snow, rain, or turbulent air to displace pollutants from the polar air mass in spring, Arctic haze can linger for more than a month in the northern atmosphere.
Irregular ridges of snow which lie parallel to the direction of the wind. Sastrugi can make travel very awkward. Rarely higher than a foot, they can be quite soft or as hard as ice.
Thick ridges that become grounded in the winter and become part of the fast ice zone. While the rest of the fast ice melts in the summer, stamukhi remains intact throughout the summer attached to the ocean floor.
Maitri is India’s second permanent research station in Antarctica. It was built and finished in 1989, shortly before the first station Dakshin Gangotri was buried in ice and abandoned in 1990-91. Maitri is situated on the rocky mountainous region called the Schirmacher Oasis.