رکورد قبلیرکورد بعدی

" Polar icebreakers in a changing world : "


Document Type : BL
Record Number : 795300
Doc. No : b615339
Main Entry : Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard Polar Icebreaker Roles and Future Needs, Polar Research Board, Division on Earth and Life Studies; Marine Board, Transportation Research Board, National Research Council of the National Academies.
Title & Author : Polar icebreakers in a changing world : : an assessment of U.S. needs\ Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard Polar Icebreaker Roles and Future Needs, Polar Research Board, Division on Earth and Life Studies; Marine Board, Transportation Research Board, National Research Council of the National Academies.
Publication Statement : Washington, DC: National Academies Press, ©2007.
Page. NO : (xii, 122 pages) : illustrations (some color), maps
ISBN : 0309665310
: : 9780309665315
Contents : Introduction --; U.S. strategic interests and missions in the polar regions --; Arctic environmental change and potential challenges --; Polar science's key role in earth system science --; U.S. Coast Guard roles and missions --; U.S. polar icebreaker fleet --; Icebreaking environments and challenges to the U.S. fleet --; Analysis of alternatives for USAP resupply --; Analysis of U.S. current and future polar icebreaking needs --; Options for acquiring new polar icebreaking services --; Findings and recommendations.
Abstract : The United States has enduring national and strategic interests in the Arctic and Antarctic, and the importance of these regions is growing with time. In the north, the United States has territory and citizens above the Arctic Circle, creating significant national interests. In the south, the United States maintains three year-round scientific stations to assert U.S. presence and ensure U.S. leadership among the nations that are signatories to the Antarctic Treaty. The United States uses this leadership to ensure that the Antarctic Treaty area, comprising all land and waters below 60 degrees South latitude, is preserved for peaceful purposes and scientific research. Antarctica is an ice-covered continent surrounded by an ocean, parts of which are seasonally ice covered. The central Arctic Ocean is perpetually ice covered, and in the winter ice extends along the northwestern Alaskan coast and south through the Bering Strait. Asserting national interests and achieving national purposes in both polar regions requires polar icebreakers, ships capable of operating in a variety of challenging ice conditions. Over the past several decades, the U.S. government has supported its polar interests with a fleet of four icebreakers. Three of these, including the world's most powerful nonnuclear icebreakers, POLAR SEA and POLAR STAR, and the modern research icebreaker HEALY, have been operated by the U.S. Coast Guard. These three ships are designed to support U.S. Coast Guard missions and to support science.
Subject : Ice breaking operations -- Polar regions.
Subject : Icebreakers (Ships) -- United States.
Subject : United States. -- Coast Guard -- Ice breaking operations.
LC Classification : ‭VM451‬‭.C666 2007‬
Added Entry : National Research Council (U.S.). Committee on the Assessment of U.S. Coast Guard Polar Icebreaker Roles and Future Needs.
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