‘From leaf to space’: N.W.T. youth join NASA flight surveying climate change effects
YELLOWKNIFE — Two Northwest Territories youth joined NASA researchers aboard a Gulfstream III jet earlier this month as it soared above Great Slave Lake and parts of Nunavut and Alberta.
“It was really cool learning about what they do — like what each person and each instrument does,” said Jacki Moore-Tsetta, a 22-year-old environmental technician with the North Slave Métis Alliance.
“It was amazing. They were so eager to show me the ropes,” added Ryan Walsh, also 22 and a summer student with the N.W.T. Centre for Geomatics.
The flight was part of NASA’s Arctic-Boreal Vulnerability Experiment, known as ABoVE, a field campaign in Alaska and Western Canada that began in 2015. The project aims to help scientists and decision makers gain a better understanding of the vulnerability and resilience of Arctic and boreal ecosystems to climate change.