ED31C-0912
Citizen Science in the Himalaya: The Sherpa-Scientist Initiative

Wednesday, 16 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Ulyana N Horodyskyj, University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, CO, United States, David Breashears, GlacierWorks, Boston, MA, United States and Patrick Rowe, Midwest ROV LLC, Concord, WI, United States
Abstract:
Since the non-profit educational group, Black Ice Himalaya, launched in 2011 our goal has been to involve local communities in our research expeditions, in the form of a Sherpa-Scientist Initiative (SSI). This goes beyond simply helping with gear carries to research sites. It involves training the local Sherpa in equipment set-up, data collection, and analysis processes, with the goal of turning over this task to local communities and villages in the future. As the terrain continues to change – with the growth and expansion of glacial lakes, along with accumulation of pollutants on snow at higher altitudes – this training program presents an excellent opportunity for long-term data collection in sensitive alpine regions.

In association with GlacierWorks and Midwest ROV LLC, skill training has included gigapan high-resolution photography, installing (and downloading) multiple time lapse cameras to track hour-by-hour glacial lake changes; lake bathymetry mapping using side-scan sonar from an unmanned towed platform; installing and managing weather stations; collecting and analyzing data from ASD field spectrometers; and collecting/filtering snow samples to look for contaminants (pollutants) affecting snow melt from 4000 – 6000 meters. A field manual documenting this work and intended to raise awareness of glacial trekking hazards has been disseminated to the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) and Sagarmatha (Everest) National Park.

In 2016-17, in collaboration with Vanguard Diving and Exploration, OpenROV, and Midwest ROV LLC, efforts will include SCUBA diving into glacial lakes to collect scientific data, with continued Sherpa training on how to assemble and use portable remotely piloted submersibles to aid in the assessment of glacial lake hazards.