性视界传媒

Mason researchers study the complicated and cascading effects of Arctic ice melt

The Arctic is warming at more than twice the rate of the rest of the planet, but for a team of researchers at 性视界传媒 that鈥檚 just the tip of the iceberg of the changes to come.

The team members, led by faculty from Mason鈥檚 聽and the ,聽are diving into how melting ice in the Arctic will affect the people, habitats, and social fabric of this remote region.

罢丑别听 grant, 鈥淎n Expanding Global Maritime Network, Its Arctic Impacts and Reverberations,鈥 provides the resources, time, and support to better understand this global challenge and to help mitigate its effects on the Arctic.

鈥淥ur project is not about whether climate change is real,鈥 says , professor, the principal investigator, and Bill and Eleanor Hazel Chair of Infrastructure Engineering at the Volgenau School. 鈥淲e are considering the effects of the sea ice melting in the Arctic and the potential for this change to affect world trade flows and a myriad of things that connect to these flows.鈥

As previously ice-bound passageways open, shorter trade routes will save time and money in the transport of goods and services. Some call this route the new Northwest passage, referencing the path to China that explorers from European nation-states of the 15th century sought but never found.

鈥淭he opening up of this northwest route will affect trade in many ways,鈥 says Miller-Hooks. 鈥淚t will affect large nations and local economies. It will affect wildlife and the environment. It will affect transportation and infrastructure.鈥澛

As more traffic passes through the Arctic, the people who live there will experience both positive and negative effects. There will be changes in supply chains, increased pollution of the shipping lanes, and changes to the fragile arctic ecosystem. On the other hand, there will be jobs and the potential for economic growth, but these opportunities could disrupt the lives of indigenous people and threaten the survival of their cultures.

, the grant鈥檚 co-principal investigator and director of the Center for the Study of Narrative and Conflict Resolution says, 鈥淭he Arctic is sort of the canary in the coal mine.鈥 Cobb brings her expertise in conflict and narrative studies as the team seeks to understand the impact of the coming changes and develop early warning systems for arctic communities.

鈥淭hose of us in the social sciences are good at qualitative work,鈥 says Cobb, Drucie French Cumbie professor at Mason鈥檚 School for聽Conflict Analysis and Resolution. 鈥淣ow the modeling work is so advanced that we need experts in that field.鈥

鈥淭he Arctic ice melt is a big problem. Big problems demand big answers and big teams. We are leading a team of experts from many different areas, including civil engineering, applied mathematics, anthropology, ice physics, coastal dynamics, and narrative approaches to conflict analysis and resolution.鈥
Elise Miller-Hooks

The study鈥檚 unique pairing of mathematical analysis with narrative studies aims to help develop tools that could lead to early responses to help mitigate the effects of the many changes in the Arctic.

associate professor in the and a co-principal investigator on the grant, adds his knowledge of flood hazards to the team.

As it turns out, sea ice in the Arctic protects coastlines from erosion like the marshes and wetlands protect the Chesapeake Bay that he studies. 鈥淎s the Arctic ice diminishes the coastlines are more vulnerable to storms and erosion,鈥 says Ferreira. The team hopes to be co-producers of knowledge with the people who live in these areas as they develop sustainable solutions to the challenges of the ice melt.

鈥淭he Arctic ice melt is a big problem. Big problems demand big answers and big teams,鈥 says Miller-Hooks. 鈥淲e are leading a team of experts from many different areas, including civil engineering, applied mathematics, anthropology, ice physics, coastal dynamics, and narrative approaches to conflict analysis and resolution.鈥

Stock photo of arctic ice sheets breaking apart over water. In the distance are icy mountains.
Mason researchers will study the effects of Arctic ice melt in a five-year multidisciplinary grant funded by the National Science Foundation. The study blends quantitative and qualitative methods to provide a more complete understanding of the effects of melting ice on the people of the region. (Stock photo).

Ultimately the research team wants to develop a toolbox that will support research around the globe with Mason researchers at the center of the work. The toolbox will include mathematical techniques for modeling how the goods will be rerouted under different scenarios. It will also consider the risks associated with the new trade routes made possible by the melting ice.

The researchers will seek to understand the coastal dynamics, consider how to best build on the melting permafrost, investigate how to plan for emergencies when the ice breaks apart, and look at the cultural impacts.

Miller-Hooks says the team鈥檚 work has opened her eyes to the interconnectedness of our world. Although she has traveled around the globe, she never thought she would visit the Arctic鈥攊t seemed so distant and remote. 鈥淚 realize now that we are all in this together. What happens in Nuuk, Greenland or Barrow, Alaska affects us all.鈥