Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Axel Heiberg Expedition



The McGill Arctic Research Station, one of the longest-operating seasonal field research facilities in the high Arctic, was established in 1960 on Axel Heiberg Island.

Axel Heiberg Island (red)


1961 Expedition
In 1961, 18 researchers occupied the station for 4 months. A mapping program was the highlight of the early phase of the project.





Axel Heiberg Expedition post card
Resolute Bay to Zurich, June 24, 1961



Today, the station consists of a small research hut, a cook house and 2 temporary structures. Current research activities include glaciology, climate change, permafrost hydrology, geology, geomorphology, limnology, planetary analogues and microbiology.


About Axel Heiberg Island

Axel Heiberg Island was one of three Arctic islands discovered by explorer Otto Sverdrup during his Norwegian Polar Expedition of 1898-1902. The island was named after the financial director of Rignes brewery, one of the Expedition sponsors. Sverdrup claimed all three islands he discovered for Norway, setting off a sovereignty dispute with Canada, which was not settled until 1930 when Norway ceded its claim.

In 2004, Canada, Greenland and Norway issued a joint stamp issue to commemorate Sverdup's Arctic explorations.





Otto Sverdrup


Fossil Trees

Axel Heiberg Island is known for its unusual fossil forests. During the Eocene period, 45 million years ago, the Axel Heiberg forest was a high latitude wetland forest. The forests were well adapted to the six months of darkness and six months of light. Many of the trees were deciduous.


Dr. A. Hope Jahren (c.2002) holding a fossil metasequoia.