World, Science-Technology

Turkish researchers set foot in Antarctic for 6th polar expedition

Journey from Istanbul to coldest continent takes nearly 3 weeks, including 7-day quarantine in Puerto Williams, Chile

Sebnem Coskun  | 09.02.2022 - Update : 09.02.2022
Turkish researchers set foot in Antarctic for 6th polar expedition Turkish researchers pose for a family photo before their departure to King George Island which is lying 120 km off the coast of Antarctica where Turkey's permanent science base to be established, in Puerto Williams, Chile on February 2, 2022. ( Sebnem Coskun - Anadolu Agency )

ANTARCTICA

After leaving Istanbul late last month to do scientific research as part of the country’s 6th Antarctic expedition, a Turkish research team set foot in the world’s coldest continent on Wednesday.

The journey, which took nearly three weeks, including a seven-day quarantine in Puerto Williams, Chile, started on Jan. 21 in Istanbul, Turkiye, a city with a population of 15.5 million.

The 20-member team of Turkiye’s 6th National Antarctic Science Expedition reached Puerto Williams – population 2,900 – via Madrid, Spain after 22 hours of flights, three transfers, and a 33-hour wait.

After a seven-day quarantine in Chile to protect against COVID-19, the expedition team arrived at the bottom of the world, Antarctica's King George Island, after a two-hour flight.

On the way to Antarctica, two foreign scientists also joined the team to carry out their projects as part of cooperation with Portugal and Bulgaria.

The team, made up of researchers from Turkiye’s Scientific and Technological Research Council (TUBITAK), Naval Forces Command, Mapping Directorate, Meteorology Directorate, Anadolu Agency, research institutes, and universities boarded the Betanzos, a Chilean-flagged ship off King George Island for 30 days of scientific work.

Scientific studies with national equipment

"The difference in this year’s expedition is our doing it within the framework of COVID-19 measures. We delivered our expedition team to Antarctica without any glitches thanks to the quarantine process," said Burcu Ozsoy, the director of TUBITAK’s Marmara Research Center Polar Research Institute.

"With national equipment from Turkish defense companies Aselsan, Havelsan, and Tubitak's Defense Industry Research and Development Institute (SAGE), we’ll do the work while both ensuring the health and safety for our journey, and at the same time testing this equipment," she added.

Ozgun Oktar, assistant expedition leader responsible for logistics, said now is the time to start the fieldwork the team has been preparing for an entire year. “Our ship's supplies are now complete. After that, we’ll set sail for a five-day challenging trip,” he said.

"We’ll see many scientific bases en route, but unfortunately we won’t visit any of them this year due to the pandemic," he added.

The 20-member team and 30-person ship’s crew will be isolated on the ship for the next month and start its scientific activities in its temporary science camp on Horseshoe Island, he said.

Hasan Hakan Yavasoglu, the assistant expedition leader, said a total of 14 scientific projects will be carried out in life sciences, earth sciences, and physical sciences, with 29 institutions as stakeholders,

Studies will be carried out on the biodiversity of Horseshoe Island, lichenified fungal flora, zooplankton species, geological development and atmospheric parameters, sea levels, tectonic movements, glacier change, and snow thickness.

"Over the last five years, 86 publications and dozens of scientific books and theses have been produced from the scientific studies carried out on the Antarctic continent,” he said.

“This year, we will be in the field with projects that will contribute to the national and international literature.”

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