Of El Nino and glaciers
Deirdre Newman
Neil Holbrook, a distinguished Australian oceanographer, has
studied glaciers in Antarctica and the El Nino weather pattern.
Last Tuesday, he lectured to students in a beginning level
oceanography course at Orange Coast College.
Dennis Kelly, the class instructor, said he invited Holbrook to
provide up-to-date, detailed insight on what his students are
studying in a more general fashion -- the entire ocean.
“He’s a research scientist and he has done some cutting-edge
research,” Kelly said. “I thought my students would get enough out of
his talk that we could discuss it informally and we could get a new
understanding because he presented some information that’s not in any
of the textbooks yet.”
Kelly’s class has just started examining the connection between
the ocean and the atmosphere and the circulation of water in the
ocean, which “based on my 28 years of study seems to be more
important than anything else,” Kelly said.
Holbrook addressed Kelly’s class in an informal and down-to-earth
manner. At one point, he put up a diagram and then said he wouldn’t
talk about it too much because even he didn’t understand it.
He talked about his adventures doing research on glaciers in
Antarctica. In 1988, he got stranded on a ship off of the continent
because of a massive engine room fire. He went back a year later and
sailed right up to a humongous glacier.
“It was amazing going on the voyage because it was the first time
anyone had gone down to the [western] region of Antarctica,” Holbrook
said. “It was dark and you basically felt like you were sailing off
the end of the Earth.”
He also talked about the history of El Nino, a warming pattern in
the eastern Pacific Ocean that he said was observed for hundreds of
years but not understood until someone figured it out at the end of
the 1960s.
Kelly said he reveres Holbrook as one of the preeminent experts on
the once-mysterious weather pattern.
“It’s like talking to the ocean about El Nino,” Kelly said.
Many of Kelly’s students said they were impressed with Holbrook’s
presentation of his research.
“I think he’s great,” said Diane Ackerman, 18. “He very
informative and it’s nice to hear new information in addition to
regular information. [Kelly] was saying this is new information to
him, too.”
After Holbrook talked to his students, Kelly had a long discussion
with them and said about one-fourth of the class understood
everything Holbrook said.
“Even those who said they didn’t understand said they were
interested because they could see how interested I was,” Kelly said.
“They were glad he came.
“The statement they made that was most profound was, ‘This is
something we need to hear regardless of whether we understand it or
not,’” Kelly said.
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot
education writer Deirdre Newman visits a campus in the Newport-Mesa
area and writes about her experience.
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