{"id":305,"date":"2016-07-05T15:54:50","date_gmt":"2016-07-05T13:54:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/arctrain.de\/?p=305"},"modified":"2018-11-08T10:57:22","modified_gmt":"2018-11-08T09:57:22","slug":"automatisch-gespeicherter-entwurf","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/arctrain.de\/automatisch-gespeicherter-entwurf\/","title":{"rendered":"To the North Pole and back"},"content":{"rendered":"
On August 26th 2014 I was standing on the geographical North Pole \u2013 how the hell did I end up there?<\/p>\n
Polarstern in the width of the Arctic \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0 Ocean<\/p><\/div>\n
Even if I tend to choose rather unusual holiday destinations, not always sunny and warm, the North Pole wasn\u2019t on my travel-to-do-list \u2013 totally out of reach, who is going to the North Pole anyway?
\nThat changed drastically since I started my PhD at AWI.<\/p>\n
I did my Masters in Marine Geoscience in Kiel, Germany, and during my master thesis and my work as a student assistant at the Geomar I developed a strong enthusiasm for the reconstruction of past climates. Somehow I wasn\u2019t done with that topic after I handed in my thesis, so I applied for PhD positions\u2026 and I was invited to an, what came out to be very successful, interview at AWI.
\nDuring the interview I was warned that the job would come with a ten-week long expedition \u2013 but no one informed me about the stop at the North Pole back then.
\nDuring my time as a student assistant I had been on some expeditions to the Arctic before but 10 weeks on a research icebreaker, 10 weeks without any land in sight, 10 weeks with ca. 100 people on confined space \u2013 I was dreading that but in the same time I was dying of anticipation.<\/p>\n