Monday, February 14, 2022

We have been settling into our new home at Escudero. We are now official visitors of Escudero, because our U.S. flag is on the pole in front of the station!

Escudero flies the Chilean flag at the top, but also the flags of the other scientists working at their station. There are four Columbian scientists here, which is the flag on the left. And there is Dr. Hannah and me from the U.S., so our flag is up, too! The flags on the right are for Magallanes, the region of Chile where Punta Arenas is, and one for INACH.

We have spent our first couple of days on the station scouting for the field sites we will use for our experiments. Yesterday we hiked along the southwest side of the glacier, and today we were on the east side. Here are some photos of the places we were exploring. Hopefully they give you a feel for the area where we are working.

We will be taking samples along a successional gradient from the edge of the glacier you see at the back of this photo. It is called the Collins glacier.

The Collins Glacier drops down off of King George Island into the ocean. Here, on the "back side" of the glacier, we are on a bay of the Drake Passage (on the west side of the island).

We are looking for areas with ample plant growth where we can collect samples. Here you see a LOT of moss, with some algae and lichen, growing on an outcrop. The glacier is behind us.