{"help": "https://canwin-datahub.ad.umanitoba.ca/data/api/3/action/help_show?name=package_show", "success": true, "result": {"PublicationYear": "2016", "Publisher": "Centre for Earth Observation Science", "ResourceType": "publication", "Rights": "Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International", "Version": "1.0", "author": null, "author_email": null, "citation": "", "creator_user_id": "be605180-ed43-4028-a29f-31a3bcd40cd6", "descriptionType": "Abstract", "id": "6c19e6f8-cb58-433f-92e7-9a8ab651af48", "isopen": false, "language": "English", "licenceType": "Open", "license_id": null, "license_title": null, "maintainer": null, "maintainer_email": null, "metadata_created": "2022-05-31T20:20:48.061244", "metadata_modified": "2022-05-31T20:23:11.031042", "name": "hudson-bay-complex", "notes": "This climate-impact assessment was completed by researchers at the University of Manitoba\u2019s Centre for Earth Observation Science (CEOS) with financial support from Transport Canada. This work is one component of a broader CEOS-Transport Canada partnership running from 2014-2016, which is a product of Transport Canada\u2019s Network of EXpertise on Transportation in Arctic Waters (NEXTAW) program. NEXTAW is part of Transport Canada\u2019s Northern Transportation Adaptation Initiative. The motivation for this project at CEOS and Transport Canada stems from an awareness of the significant environmental changes occurring in the Canadian Arctic and a shared desire to better understand these changes and the impact they may have on marine transportation in the area. This assessment examines the impact of climate change in Hudson Bay, Hudson Strait, and Foxe Basin, and considers the resultant vulnerabilities and opportunities for the Port of Churchill\u2019s marine operations extending to 2030 and 2050. Changes in sea ice and their consequences for shipping routes are of particular interest. The Port of Churchill\u2019s land-based infrastructure and operations are not examined in this assessment. This document\u2019s primary audience is those parties with a vested interested in marine transportation in the Hudson Bay Complex. This includes the Port of Churchill\u2019s central stakeholders, such as OmniTRAX Canada, Manitoba Infrastructure and Transportation, and Transport Canada, as well as community and industry members from around the Complex. More generally, it is our intention that this document will be useful to all those interested in the intersection between Climate Change and marine transportation in the Canadian Arctic.", "num_resources": 1, "num_tags": 4, "organization": {"id": "9e21f6b6-d13f-4ba2-a379-fd962f507071", "name": "ceos", "title": "Centre for Earth Observation Science", "type": "organization", "description": "The Centre for Earth Observation Science (CEOS) was established in 1994 with a mandate to research, preserve and communicate knowledge of Earth system processes using the technologies of Earth Observation Science. Research is multidisciplinary and collaborative seeking to understand the complex interrelationships between elements of Earth systems, and how these systems will likely respond to climate change. 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Marine Mammals: Seals, whales, habitat, conservation, satellite telemetry, distribution, population studies, prey behaviour, bioacoustics.\r\n\r\nModelling: Simulation of sea ice and oceanic regional processes, Nucleus for European Modelling of the Ocean (NEMO), ice-ocean modelling and interactions, hind cast simulations and projections for sea ice state and ocean variables based on CMIP5 scenarios and MIROC5 forcing, validation.\r\n\r\nOceanography: Circulation, temperature, in-flow and out-flow shelves, water dynamics, microturbulence, Beaufort Gyre, eddy correlations.\r\n\r\nSea Ice Geophysics:Thermodynamic and dynamic processes, extreme ice features and hazards, snow, ridges, polynyas.\r\n\r\nTraditional and Local Knowledge: Indigenous cultures, Inuit, Inuvialuit, oral history, toponomy, mobility and settlement, hunting, food security, sea ice use, community-based research, community-based monitoring, two ways of knowing.", "image_url": "2021-11-13-003953.952874UMLogoHORZ.jpg", "created": "2017-07-21T13:15:49.935872", "is_organization": true, "approval_status": "approved", "state": "active"}, "owner_org": "9e21f6b6-d13f-4ba2-a379-fd962f507071", "private": false, "related_datasets": [], "related_programs": [], "rightsIdentifier": "CC-BY-4.0", "rightsIdentifierScheme": "SPDX", "rightsSchemeURI": "https://spdx.org/licenses", "rightsURI": "https://spdx.org/licenses/CC-BY-4.0.html", "schemeURI": "https://www.polardata.ca/pdcinput/public/keywordlibrary", "state": "active", "subjectScheme": "Polar Data Catalogue", "theme": ["3707ff10-6424-4858-9ec9-7d67b38831b3", "8f8cd877-b037-4b1a-b928-f86d9e093741", "98238b1c-5be8-41ad-8c6e-74cdc4f5f369"], "title": "Climate Change in the Hudson Bay Complex: Opportunities and Vulnerabilities for the Port of Churchill's Marine Operations", "type": "publication", "url": null, "version": null, "Author": [{"affiliation": "", "creatorName": "Andrews, J.", "email": "", "nameIdentifier": "", "nameType": "Personal"}, {"affiliation": "Centre for Earth Observation Science - University of Manitoba", "creatorName": "Babb, D.", "email": "david.babb@umanitoba.ca", "nameIdentifier": "", "nameType": "Personal"}, {"affiliation": "", "creatorName": "McKernan, M.", "email": "", "nameIdentifier": "", "nameType": "Personal"}, {"affiliation": "", "creatorName": "Horton, B.", "email": "", "nameIdentifier": "", "nameType": "Personal"}, {"affiliation": "Centre for Earth Observation Science - University of Manitoba", "creatorName": "Barber, D.", "email": "ceosinfo@umanitoba.ca", "nameIdentifier": "", "nameType": "Personal"}], "extras": [{"key": "awardTitle", "value": ""}, {"key": "awardURI", "value": "https://mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca/xmlui/handle/1993/31138"}, {"key": "funderIdentifier", "value": ""}, {"key": "funderIdentifierType", "value": ""}, {"key": "funderName", "value": ""}, {"key": "funderSchemeURI", "value": ""}, {"key": "grantNumber", "value": ""}, {"key": "keywords", "value": "Sea ice,climate change,Churchill estuary,Hudson Bay Complex"}], "groups": [{"description": "The cryosphere encompasses all the parts of the Earth system where water is in solid form, including ice sheets, ice shelves, glaciers, snow cover, permafrost (frozen ground), sea ice, and river and lake ice. 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