Blogger In Antarctica Contest Getting Interesting

Spread the love

Have a look at this. Two of my favorite bloggers re in the top ten: Devorah, who is in third, and Danielle who is in eigth. The rest of these people are obviously interlopers, especially this guy Luis who is in first place. Please go and help fix that. Thank you very much…

Have you read the breakthrough novel of the year? When you are done with that, try:

In Search of Sungudogo by Greg Laden, now in Kindle or Paperback
*Please note:
Links to books and other items on this page and elsewhere on Greg Ladens' blog may send you to Amazon, where I am a registered affiliate. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases, which helps to fund this site.

Spread the love

0 thoughts on “Blogger In Antarctica Contest Getting Interesting

  1. I wondered whether the fabled “green flash” at sundown could last a long time — minutes? — in Antarctica, around the equinox. I found somebody there to e-mail and ask about it. He hadn’t seen it happen, but said somebody else he knew who spent a lot of time out on the ice had.

  2. @Nathan Myers: According to Marcel Minnaert (~1928):

    “During Byrd’s expedition to the South Pole, the green ray was observed for 35 minutes, while the sun, rising for the first time at the close of a long polar night, was moving exactly along the horizon.”

    So there you go – as long as the atmospheric conditions are right for the green flash and the sun is in the correct position just below the horizon, you may see a prolonged flash at the poles. However, I’d like to point out that the planned expedition will arrive around the middle of the summer when the sun is above the horizon all day. If the sun at least dips low enough around midnight there may be a chance of observing the ray if conditions are good and you can duck behind a nearby object such as a rock (which a number of people have testified to, although such testimony remains rare). Minnaert himself wrote that he could observe the flash for longer if he could run up the incline on a dyke. Anecdotally, the best conditions are at times with very low aerosol loading; I wonder if the flash is observed less frequently in the northern hemisphere now that aerosols are so plentiful that the sky turns whitish rather than simply blue.

  3. Do a bit of googling about the guy in second place, Don Osmond. He’s the son of Donny Osmond (and a mormon to boot).

    To be fair, I do have slightly more interest than most in Grrlscientist winning: she’ll be taking my camera if she wins.

  4. I’ll have to ask my good friend who has been in Antarctica for months (is still there now) and will be returning about the time all these whimps who go down during the southern summer arrive.

    Bob, are you serious?

  5. I was at The South Pole at sunrise last year….witnessed a prolonged “green flash”.

    I haven’t read too deeply about Quark’s expedition, but it will likely be a typical cruise route….which means it will spend quite a bit of time north of the Antarctic Circle – even if it does go south of the circle, the furthest south navigable waters are at about 77 degrees – long way from The South Pole

  6. (Oops, shjould have followed this…)

    Bob, are you serious?

    Yep. I applied a bit of Google foo to his name, and was somewhat surprised…

    Grrl is still in third place, BTW. Booo!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *