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Science Quickly

Researchers Just Created the World's First Permafrost Atlas of the Entire Arctic

Science Quickly

Scientific American

Science

4.2639 Ratings

🗓️ 13 December 2023

⏱️ 8 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The Arctic Permafrost Atlas, which took years to create, is both beautiful and sobering, given the pace of climate change. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Understanding the human body is a team effort. That's where the Yachtel group comes in.

0:05.8

Researchers at Yachtolt have been delving into the secrets of probiotics for 90 years.

0:11.0

Yacold also partners with nature portfolio to advance gut microbiome science through the global grants for gut health, an investigator-led research program.

0:19.6

To learn more about Yachtolt, visit yawcult.co.

0:22.7

.jp. That's y-A-K-U-L-T.C-O.jp. When it comes to a guide for your gut, count on Yacult.

0:32.3

Imagine the entire Earth. Now think about the places where all the ground is frozen solid. Do you know where

0:41.6

they are? What if I told you that permafrost isn't only found at the poles and that it exists

0:48.5

under the sea on the Tibetan plateau and on top of North America's Rocky Mountains.

0:55.6

For science quickly, I'm Emily Schwing.

1:01.5

For more than six years, researchers have been working to account for all of the planet's

1:06.3

frozen ground as part of the Nunataryuk Permafrost Research project. They're also going one step further to document who lives on Permafrost, makes use of it, and what its cultural significance is.

1:19.6

What's come of their effort is the world's first and only Permafrost Atlas of the entire Arctic.

1:26.6

So it's a coffee table atlas that you can open anywhere and start reading and learning about

1:31.1

permafrost.

1:32.3

Levy Westervelt is a geographer and cartographer.

1:35.6

He worked as an editor on the Arctic Permafrost Atlas.

1:38.9

I think one of the first questions we ask ourselves is what was the ultimate goal of the

1:43.3

Atlas and what was the audience

1:45.7

we were trying to reach? And quite fast, I think became clear that we wanted to create something

1:51.2

that was very accessible from policymakers who might not have heard of permafrost before

1:56.1

to children and schools that are interested to learn more in the topic.

2:00.1

What came of the project is a nearly 160-page document loaded with dozens of maps,

...

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