Look At Me Still Talking When There’s Science To Do

In Grand Rapids… thinking about Barrow (among other things)

Archive for dry site

Let the great experiment begin!

Today was day one of point framing. Point framing is more or less the reason I’m here, since “my” site (Atqasuk wet) and Jeremy’s site (Atqasuk dry) could easily be done by only one person. Since Jeremy is doing point framing, however, his schedule becomes more full. Plus, point framing is a pain in the everything to have to do by yourself. It involves a 70 cm x 70cm grid being carefully (and levelly) set up over all 96 plots in Barrow. At each of the 100 intersections in the grid, a ruler is dropped through. Everything it touches is identified and recorded. Usually, for each of the 100 points, there are two data entries and then the ground height. It’s much easier if one person (me) is just sitting and listening and writing everything down.

This morning we got two point frames done. The first took ninety minutes; the second, fifty. Not bad. We had to get used to the rhythm of the thing and the codes that make yelling the names and writing the names and analyzing the data so much easier. Like this:

Jeremy: Cas tet, dead, 24.5

Me: (scribble scribble)

Jeremy: Dac arc, 25.1

Me: (scrib-) Alive or dead??

Jeremy: Oh. Alive. Dactylinia arctica is always alive.

Me: Okay then! (-ble scribble)

Jeremy: Ground. 25.4. Next!

It is EVER so much fun. But really, it kind of is. For me, anyway. I kind of like writing things down. And I don’t really scribble. I actually spent most of the morning admiring our four completed data pages. I was having a good handwriting day. Especially the 4s. I got to write so many 4s.

My mechanical pencils decided to be faulty, however. Stupid things. Our sub-standard office supplies situation is going to have to be remedied in the near future. Perhaps tomorrow when we go to town to get Job from the airport at seven p.m.!

Here I go again with Lessons One and Two.

We’ve started the real Science now, and we’re moving full-force into the hard work. It’s a bit difficult to describe without being long-winded and/or boring, but, having already presented the general idea of the plots and chambers, there is a good starting point.

Jeremy and I are in charge of the two sites in Atqasuk. Jeremy is in charge when The Boss is away. Barrow and Atqasuk both have a wet site and a dry site. This is exactly what it sounds like. The wet site has some standing water and is generally squishy. It is also chock-full of grasses and sedges which look almost the same, while the dry site is more of a plants-among-dirt setup.

I get the wet site. It is the best. Firstly and superficially, it is the best because it has the fewest species of all four sites, but that doesn’t mean it is that much easier, since the plants are more tangled and complicated than Jeremy’s. Secondly, the boardwalk is built most cleverly of all the boardwalks, meaning that the gap between the two boards is not big enough for a boot to slip through (How To Sprain An Ankle In The Arctic #1). Lastly, the folders for the ATK wet site are designated the color green, which clearly is superior to the red, yellow, and purple folders of my co-scientists.

If I were really going the PR route I would leave out the long walk to the wet site, the increased likelihood of mosquito activity, and the fact that some of my plants are nearly indistinguishable from each other- especially now when they are just poking out of the ground of the water, and Boss is still here to watch me get confused every time (it helps when I ask him a question and he considers for a few moments before saying “weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeell it’s probably dupontia, I don’t know, it’s hard to tell.”) As I am not scared of either hardship or extremely long sentences, I recorded that last bit. For honesty. For science. For posterity.

After a long day of bending, considering, guessing, measuring, and writing, I get to look forward to the long walk over the tundra. I don’t want to make any distance guesses, since I am horribly inaccurate at that kind of thing, but it’s a solid half hour of walking over what is essentially baseballs covered in different thicknesses of foam padding (How To Sprain An Ankle In The Arctic #2). Add grass and patches of water to wade through, and you get a good idea of what my daily cardio workout is going to look like.

We go through the complete cycle of data collection in Atqasuk once a week. Though the measuring part was finished today, the status-reporting and flower-counting has to be finished up tomorrow. Maybe it will get above fifty degrees?