WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.010 --> 00:00:04.030 [music] It's been two years since Operation IceBridge has flown 2 00:00:04.050 --> 00:00:08.100 over the West Antarctic Ice Sheet – one of the fastest-melting 3 00:00:08.120 --> 00:00:12.160 large masses of ice on the planet. 4 00:00:12.180 --> 00:00:16.170 Back then, the mission was based out of Punta Arenas, Chile, a great location if you 5 00:00:16.190 --> 00:00:20.190 want to hit the West Antarctic and other science targets near the Antarctic Peninsula. 6 00:00:20.210 --> 00:00:24.230 But for the first time last fall, the mission moved its 7 00:00:24.250 --> 00:00:28.250 field site to the even more remote McMurdo Station, where they 8 00:00:28.270 --> 00:00:32.310 completed the most-comprehensive long-range surveys ever performed of 9 00:00:32.330 --> 00:00:36.340 several areas. For many on the team, it was a new experience 10 00:00:36.360 --> 00:00:40.360 to actually touch down in Antarctica, and see firsthand 11 00:00:40.380 --> 00:00:44.370 things like Weddell seals basking in the sun, gigantic pressure ridges 12 00:00:44.390 --> 00:00:48.410 of sea ice formed by the ice pushing against the coast 13 00:00:48.430 --> 00:00:52.430 the volcanic Mount Erebus, and Scotts cabin 14 00:00:52.450 --> 00:00:56.540 with 100-year old seal flippers mummified by the dry Antarctic air. 15 00:00:56.560 --> 00:01:00.580 But front and center on the teams’ mind 16 00:01:00.600 --> 00:01:04.630 was the new complexity of this year’s challenge. There were new weather patterns 17 00:01:04.650 --> 00:01:08.670 to decipher, new training exercises to prepare the pilots for landing 18 00:01:08.690 --> 00:01:12.730 on a floating sea ice runway, and a host of new regulations for operating 19 00:01:12.750 --> 00:01:16.750 out of McMurdo. Adding to the challenge: a runway 20 00:01:16.770 --> 00:01:20.780 wasstarting to melt away as summer approached. 21 00:01:20.800 --> 00:01:24.800 Even with these challenges and a shortened schedule, the team was able to measure 22 00:01:24.820 --> 00:01:28.810 the sea ice of the Ross Sea, along with land ice 23 00:01:28.830 --> 00:01:32.850 the Siple Coast, the Dome C / Lake Vostok region, 24 00:01:32.870 --> 00:01:36.910 along the Trans Antarctic Mountains, and over Victoria Land. 25 00:01:36.930 --> 00:01:40.920 IceBridge demonstrated it could operate out of this new region and plans to go back 26 00:01:40.940 --> 00:01:45.000 in 2015. But the network of NASA, university, 27 00:01:45.020 --> 00:01:49.020 and international partners who use IceBridge data also 28 00:01:49.040 --> 00:01:53.070 want to see how things have changed in the Antarctic Peninsula, on the Ronne Ice Shelf, 29 00:01:53.090 --> 00:01:57.130 and in the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, so they're returning 30 00:01:57.150 --> 00:02:01.150 to operation out of Punta Arenas, Chile once again this year. 31 00:02:01.170 --> 00:02:05.180 [music] 32 00:02:05.200 --> 00:02:13.780 [beep beep, beep beep]