royal society fellow john england

19
In the following slides, he offers some memories of his research and travels. Dr. John England (earth and atmospheric sciences) was named as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, for 2012.

Upload: university-of-alberta-faculty-of-science

Post on 19-Feb-2016

225 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

For almost fifty years, England has documented environmental changes across the Canadian Arctic Archipelago - from the last ice age to the modern day. Rocognition for his work includes an inaugural NSERC Northern Research Chair and an appointment as Fellow to the Royal Society of Canada.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Royal Society Fellow John England

In the following slides, he offers some memories of his

research and travels.

Dr. John England (earth and atmospheric sciences) was named as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, for 2012.

Page 2: Royal Society Fellow John England

This is me (left) and Chris MacKahey, on eastern Baffin Island (1965). I’m holding up fresh caribou given to us by a group of Inuk hunters who passed by our camp. Chris holds our fine cooking!

Page 3: Royal Society Fellow John England

Here we are on on a mass balance transect across the Barnes Ice Cap, central Baffin Island during my early days as a summer field assistant on Baffin Island. The Barnes Ice Cap is the last remnant of the former Laurentide Ice Sheet that still covered most of mainland Canada up to12,000 years ago. The photo was taken at midnight, early May (1966), and the cliffs of the ice cap’s northeast margin can be seen (left centre) above the flat expanse of ice-covered Conn Lake, impounded between the higher terrain (right background) and the ice cap.

Page 4: Royal Society Fellow John England

My 21st birthday on the Barnes Ice Cap, central Baffin Island (1967). I was a field assistant helping to survey the ice cap’s annual mass balance measurements. Left to right: Olav Loken (party chief), Pat McLaren with me (JE) on his shoulders, Doug Hodgson (in supporting role!) and John Clough (squatting).

Page 5: Royal Society Fellow John England

Typical fly camp along outer Inugsuin Fiord, eastern Baffin Island, July, 1965. I was a field assistant investigating the glacial and sea level history while surveying the coast by small boat. The serenity of the Arctic suffused and sparked my interest when I was then eighteen.

Page 6: Royal Society Fellow John England

Me surveying raised marine shorelines at the head of Archer Fiord, northeast Ellesmere Island, during the first year of my PhD research, early June, 1971.

Page 7: Royal Society Fellow John England

One of the two notes I found during my PhD research on northeast Ellesmere Island. This note was left by the British expedition led by Sir George Nares, and bears the signature of Captain Stephenson of HMS Discovery (March 10, 1876) that was then anchored in Discovery Harbour, just offshore from the future sight of Ft. Conger. I found the note on Mt. Campbell, Bellot Island (nearby).

Page 8: Royal Society Fellow John England

Me in 1978, along the shores of the Arctic Ocean. I’m holding up a wooden plank from a food cache left by Robert Peary, on one of his efforts to reach the north pole from northern Ellesmere Island during the early 1900’s. The plank was from an Eagle Brand box (sweetened condensed milk) and appropriately reads, “store in a cool, dry place”!

Page 9: Royal Society Fellow John England

Scenic outlet glaciers converging onto the floor of a valley inland of Glacier Fiord, southeast Axel Heiberg Island. I took the photograph from a

Twin Otter in 1981 en route to Ellesmere Island. I’ve studied the past activity (Ice Age to present) of

such glaciers across the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, and surveyed and dated countless raised marine shorelines

that record uplift of the earth’s crust following ice retreat during the past 10,000 years. This uplift of the land continues in many parts of

northern Canada today and its documentation provides essential input for modelling on-going sea level change throughout the world.

Page 10: Royal Society Fellow John England

A small, rock-framed fox trap replete with a fox skull that I opened in 1971 on northern Ellesmere Island. This site likely dates from the Thule Culture ca. 1000 years ago whose remains are quite common around throughout the eastern Canadian Arctic.

Page 11: Royal Society Fellow John England

View northward across the Hazen Plateau to the ice-covered Grant Land Mts of northeast Ellesmere Island (~80 km distance, 2500 meters above sea level). View is from the head of Chandler Fiord (foreground) northward up the still-frozen Ruggles River that flows from Lake Hazen at the base of the mountains. In 1972, I proposed what is now Quttinirpaaq National Park and conducted its first Natural Resource Inventory (1981) with Catherine La Farge, Steve Zoltai, Jan Bednarski, Josef Svoboda, Lyn Kershaw, Don Lemmen and Tom Stewart. This included the boundaries of what is now Canada’s northernmost and second-largest park.

Page 12: Royal Society Fellow John England

This is the second note I found, left by the late 19th century explorers on northeast Ellesmere Island. This note is particularly relevant as it details the initial discoveries of the Lady Franklin Bay Expedition, led by Adolphus Greely, leader of the United States’ contribution to the First Polar Year (1881-82), referred to in the opening line. The note was several pages in length, signed by second-in-command, Lieutenant Lockwood who deposited it in a cairn at Record Point, Archer Fiord, ~70 km west of their base at Ft. Conger, Discovery Harbour. JE found the cairn while sledding over the sea ice in June, 1972. The note resides at the National Archives, Ottawa.

Page 13: Royal Society Fellow John England

View southward along the mountainous east coast of Judge Daly Promontory, northeast Ellesmere Island, Nunavut. This is the coastline that Greely and his party followed southward in the fall of 1883, en route to their tragic overwintering at Cape Sabine, ca. 300 km away.

Page 14: Royal Society Fellow John England

Affectionately known as “Bob the wolf”, I took this photograph as I was laying on the ground (hence out-of-focus foot in the foreground). “Bob” had stolen a graduate student’s boot - requiring a replacement pair to be flown all the way to our camp on Axel Heiberg Island from Yellowknife (a few thousand kilometres away), obviously at great effort and expense. Days after the arrival of the replacement boots in this remote camp, Bob craftily brought the previously pilfered boot back, undamaged! One of our many humorous stories.

Bob the wolf, boot thief.

Page 15: Royal Society Fellow John England

The award of an NSERC Northern Research Chair to JE (2002-2012) substantially expanded and diversified my research program in the western Canadian Arctic. The support allowed me to diversify my research to include partnerships with the students from Aurora College, Inuvik. Here, I’m (middle) sharing my 2005 camp on northern Banks Island with two remarkable Inuvialuit students (Vernon Amos, left, and Eli Nasogaluak, right), enrolled in the Environmental and Natural Resources Technology Program. Both of these individuals remain close friends and are leaders in environmental decision-making throughout the Mackenzie-Beaufort region.

Page 16: Royal Society Fellow John England

The world-renown Canadian Twin Otter equipped with “big wheels” enabling it to land camps in rugged, isolated sites throughout the Arctic where air strips are absent. This is a ‘Twin” provided to us by the Polar Continental Shelf Program (NRCan, Ottawa) based out of Resolute Bay, Cornwallis Island. Inclement weather and difficult terrain have rendered many harrowing stories of this iconic aircraft’s amazing exploits at the hands of remarkable pilots. The best in the world!

Page 17: Royal Society Fellow John England

This is a picture of me, standing on the cliff at the southern margin of the Hazen Plateau, now within Quttinirpaaq National Park, northern Ellesmere island. View is to the southwest across the sea ice of Lady Franklin Bay to Judge Daly Promontory on the horizon. Cliff is about 1000 m high.

Page 18: Royal Society Fellow John England

Spectacular piedmont glacier descending to the valley floor inland of Li Fiord, western Axel Heiburg Island. Photographed in July, 2000, while on a helicopter survey of the Quaternary glacial and sea level history of this area with Roy Coulthard, a graduate student in Earth and Atmospheric Sciences.

Page 19: Royal Society Fellow John England

Me, with President Yoland Grisé, at my induction into the Royal Society of Canada, Ottawa, 2012. I plan to remain engaged in northern research and to promote the importance of our northern heritage to the Canadian public.