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Career of the Month: An Interview With Ice Scientist Julienne Stroeve

The Science Teacher—April/May 2009

While most of us may never see or feel Arctic sea ice ourselves, it directly influences the climate, wildlife, and people who live in the Arctic—and because of the link to global warming, the fate of sea ice affects the rest of us, too. As an ice scientist with the National Snow and Ice Data Center, Julienne Stroeve studies the changes in Arctic sea ice to piece together what its decline means for our planet.
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