S3|EP3: The Carbon Problem
Narration: LK Ward
Transcript:
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This seems like an unlikely place for fires.
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In the winter the landscape is still.
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But the warmer months can bring conditions that, combined with fire,
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can release dangerous amounts of carbon into the atmosphere
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And in more ways than one.
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What happens in the Arctic does not stay in the Arctic anymore.
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NASA Explorers
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Episode Three
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The Carbon Problem
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Fires
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I see that you’re wearing a hat with a logo on it.
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Can you describe what that is?
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You don't have to take your hat off!
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Well, that’s good.
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Kevin, in the orange jacket, is a close NASA collaborator.
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He and his team are used to getting their hands dirty to collect crucial fire data.
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I’m wearing a hat right now, from the ABoVE field campaign
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And what you see is a big "A"
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And it stands for trees tilting over with thawing permafrost
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[laughing]
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Trees aren’t the only thing getting warped by thawing permafrost.
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Buildings and even roads begin to buckle
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when the ground beneath them literally begins to liquify.
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NASA’s ABoVE campaign is currently in the Northwest Territories
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to understand large scale changes to permafrost.
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Permafrost is basically, picture in your mind, frozen dirt
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Now if you thaw the permafrost out, it changes from
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solid rock or concrete, to mud.
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If you watched Season One of NASA Explorers,
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then you know that permafrost stores huge amounts of carbon.
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As a matter of fact, twice as much as what’s currently in the atmosphere today.
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Now, thankfully permafrost thaws really slowly
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and therefore releases carbon really slowly.
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But here’s where it gets complicated.
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Fires in high northern latitudes (permafrost regions)
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are getting larger, they're getting more frequent, getting more intense
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In the past, permafrost has had a reliable layer of insulation
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- mostly moss.
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But if you have a fire,
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it burns off the vegetation. The insulation is, essentially, removed.
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To summarize, changing climate means more fires,
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more thawing, more carbon in the atmosphere
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and that accelerates warming.
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Permafrost is one of those important factors that affects life on Earth,
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yet it isn’t really in the public eye - unless you live on it.
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But for Kevin, understanding this phenomenon is
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the best way to make the biggest difference.
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So way back in the 80s, when I was in college
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my mom got cancer. And was dying.
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And I remember the last time I saw her,
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We were sitting down, and she was in bed, very sick.
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And she asked me what did I want to do.
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And until then, of course, I was a typical teenager in college
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I had no clue.
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But then it crystalized in my mind that
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I wanted to save the planet.
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And that was the words that I used.
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I decided that my path for doing that was to go into spaceflight
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Save the planet by leaving it, I suppose.
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But then, circumstances changed and
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I started working on Earth observations.
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and it opened my eyes to what you can do with remote sensing and satellites
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And what you could see and learn about the Earth from looking at it from space
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That's why I decided to go back to school
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And I rethought of what I talked to my mom about
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and I decided to go back to school and become a scientist.
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The hours are long and the work is hard.
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But these explorers wouldn’t have it any other way.
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This is really, you know, tough country. It's really rugged.
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But it’s also very beautiful country.
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I think I can speak for nearly every scientist that I've worked with.
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They do this because they want to help.
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They want to provide the information and tools to solve problems.
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On the next episode of NASA Explorers
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NASA is a big and capable organization,
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but Earth science is a subject far too big
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for one country, one agency, to tackle all by itself.
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Episode Four: Chasing Clouds
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