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RRS James Clark Ross left Harwich for summer mission in Antarctica

Friday, November 6th 2020 - 09:16 UTC
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The ship will spend seven weeks sailing from UK to King Edward Point and Bird Island research stations, dropping off the station teams, food and fuel The ship will spend seven weeks sailing from UK to King Edward Point and Bird Island research stations, dropping off the station teams, food and fuel

The RRS James Clark Ross left the Port of Harwich on Thursday beginning its five-and-a-half-month mission to deliver scientific and operational staff to Antarctica and to resupply the UK stations in Antarctica for another year.

Seventy members of staff are on board, made up of the ship’s crew, summer support teams and the 2021 wintering station teams. To maintain safety, everyone spent two weeks in quarantine before joining the ship. Each person had three COVID-19 tests during that time.

The ship will spend seven weeks sailing from the UK to King Edward Point and Bird Island research stations, dropping off the station teams, food, fuel, scientific equipment and medical supplies before heading into the Falkland Islands to re-supply. She will then stop at Signy Research Station, before reaching Rothera Research Station in late December.

From Rothera, a team of 10 staff will fly to Halley Research Station to spend four to six weeks collecting data, servicing the scientific instruments and maintaining the station infrastructure before flying back to Rothera. At Halley, core scientific data can be collected year-round through the Halley Automation Project. Autonomous scientific equipment around the station and on the Brunt Ice Shelf collects information on weather, climate and the ozone.

The RRS James Clark Ross will return to the Falkland Islands before making a final call at all four stations to collect the station staff and scientific samples before sailing for the UK. They will leave behind only the wintering teams at Rothera, King Edward Point and Bird Island who will spend 12-18 months on station without returning home.

Professor Dame Jane Francis, Director of BAS, says, “This will be a season like no other. COVID-19 continues to present BAS with exceptional operational challenges and our priority is keeping our staff and collaborators safe, and keeping Antarctica COVID-19 free. We will maintain all our data monitoring so there will be no gaps in our long-term collection of weather data, ice-sheet information and wildlife statistics.”

”The 2020/21 season will be shorter than usual with no crew change, to ensure the ship and Antarctica remain COVID-19 free. The RRS James Clark Ross will arrive back in the UK in March 2021.” (BAS)

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