PROGRESS DIARY #10
June 19-22
RECONNAISSANCE IN ALASKA
The Biological Sciences Division
of the NSF requested that I, as PI of ANI-9909218 funded by the
Advanced Networking division, consider adding the Bonanza Creek,
Alaska LTER, outside of Fairbanks, to my work over the next two
years, supplementing the original grant to cover its costs. To attempt
to connect up, wirelessly, a series of data loggers that are deployed
in extreme-weather places which can be very difficult to service
on a regular basis. The general location is shown below.

Between June 18th and June 23d I
traveled to Alaska to see the data logger sites up close and personal,
consult with the PIs and Researchers for the project, judge whether
or not I can connect them up over the distances required and under
the conditions the radios will experience, and make an estimate
of what it would take.
Since the final decision has not
been reached whether this task will be added to the Trout Lake and
El Yunque Research areas, I will only give a survey here of what
I found. Well illustrated by digital photographs I took.
I spent one day, the 20th of June,
in Anchorage before traveling to Fairbanks, the main campus of the
University of Alaska, where the LTER is headquartered, and housed
in the Arctic Health Center building. The purpose was to visit possible
sources of supply, other than radios, that would be needed in any
extensive wireless project. Power supplies - batteries, solar panels,
wind generators, RF cabling, connectors, fasteners, telescoping
antenna poles, and all the small items needed, that should not have
to be shipped from the Lower 48.
Alaska Battery company, and Frigid
North, an electrical supply house were the best stocked, and deliver
quickly to Fairbanks. And demonstrate expertise about severe weather
conditions which we would need.
I also accepted a recommendation
from a long standing colleague, 'Red' Boucher, owner of Alaska Wireless,
who had successfully installed wireless systems in villages such
as Tooksook Bay, on the Bering Sea, to consider subcontracting with
a technician who lives in Anchorage. I could use his knowledge of
cold weather installations, his physical help when the time comes
to install radios between links miles apart, and someone to be on
call for trouble shooting only 1 hour flight time from Fairbanks,
rather than the lengthy trips from Colorado. So Rick Erickson accompanied
me to Fairbanks, and proved valuable in my preliminary site survey.
We flew low over the spectacular Denali Range enroute to Fairbanks.

During the preliminary meeting with
researchers from the Institute of Arctic Biology, Dr Marilyn Walker,
Dr. Larry Hinzman, (Dr Terry Chapin, the overall PI was out of Fairbanks
at the time, but kept close tabs on the visit) and Stephanie Pike,
Data Manager, I agreed to visit, not only the Bonanza Creek area,
20 some miles southwest of Fairbanks, but also the Caribou/Poker
Flat Watershed, 35 miles northeast. They requested that I consider
connecting up key points in both areas, which are administered by
researchers a bit differently.

We first traveled, by truck and
power boat, down the Tanana River, to reach data logger sites on
both sides of the river, which gets to be a half mile wide in places.
Stephanie Pike, the Data Manager for Bonanza Creek sites was our
guide. She travels to these sites weekly, winter (by snowmobile
and snowshoe) and summer (by power boat and hiking) to bring back
the data logger modules, replace batteries, and generally maintains
the systems.

Stephanie Pike on her boat.

The Tanana River

We passed several data logger locations,
most of which are not very far from the river, while I looked over
the terrain, the density of woods, the relationship of them to peaks
nearer the University on the northwestern corner of Fairbanks, and
questioned Stephanie.
We traveled 16 miles downriver
in the jet powered Sprint Powerboat. Jets are required because the
glacially fed river carries much debris from the banks that are
constantly being eroded. Here is a look at the banks of the river,
where large trees grow, and the erosion from the river cuts back
until they topple.

We stopped and hiked into several
sites. Two of them were identified as the highest priority to link
up, because they are furthest and hardest to get to in the winter.
Data Logger FP4A is shown below here.

The woods are 'medium' around some
of these sites, as shown.

It appeared to me it would not be
too difficult to get radio links through the woods to the river,
for sites on the south side, from where clean line of sites exist
to some peaks. For others it would take tall masts, at least 18
to 50 feet, to clear the trees sufficiently to reach relay peaks.
This will have to be confirmed by carrying actual radios, batteries,
a variety of antennas, and telescoping poles on a later trip.
Mosquitos are heavy, so we were
prepared with salves, and we had to wear waterproof boots across
the spongy wet ground.
At a larger LTER site on the north
side of the river, an area about 100 meters in diameter had been
cleared (apparently earlier, helicopters were used to lower heavier
tower and small building equipment into sites.) The following Tower,
with 10, 3, 1 meter wind anemometers sits in the middle.

This important site is connected
by cell phone, at its maximum range - and then only by use of Yagi
antennas, and repeated attempts to dial, from the University. Beyond
this distance, all sites would have to be linked wirelessly through
relay links. Cell phone access to the data loggers is impossible.
One curious thing I noted, was
how vertical to the ground the few solar panels erected were. I
am not sure how exact the solar power engineering has been, for
the panels are too small to fully recharge the batteries deployed
at each site, but the reason given is that in winter, the strongest
sunlight is at the horizon. Their strategy seems to be to have heavy
duty cycle batteries, and more than one, at each site, and replace
them. Hence pointing the panels. The next picture shows Stephanie
in front of one panel, and pointing at where the sun, in winter,
would be.

As we returned the 16 miles upstream
again it seemed to me that linking the data loggers from their wooded
sites to each other through the trees as ground level would not
be too difficult, but getting long links back to the University
will be a challenge. There is no single high point that can 'see'
all Bonanza Creek data logger locations.
In the winter, they must wait until
the river freezes over hard enough, before they use it as a snowmobile
highway to reach the sites. And in the spring, it takes over a month
after the breakup, before they can use the boat again. Of course
Stephanie Pike seems quite comfortable in the winter weather, and,
if required, would use her dog sled.

After meeting in the afternoon with
the Researcher again, it was clear that they desire to deploy many
more data loggers. But with the labor-intensive effort required
to visit, weekly, each logger, there is a point of diminishing returns.
So they really could use wireless access to the data, as extensively
as possible. As we planned the next day's trip to Caribou/Poker
Creeks Research Area, Dr. Hinzman, PI for that research identified
for us three high priority data logger sites in the area, which
he wished could deliver data continuously.
Caribou Creek/Poker Creek
We left at 8:30 AM with Dr. Kenji
Yoshikawa, whose field is the study of Permafrost. Kenji, a Japanese
American who arrived at Pt Barrow, Alaska by sailing his own boat
from Hokkaido, Japan, does much of the field work in this area.
He is also, helpfully, a Radio Ham operator, who has experimented
with radios to move data. I realized he will probably be the one
in the LTER team who will most quickly master what it takes to expand
a wireless network beyond our initial installations.
We drove over paved highway out
of Fairbanks, past a point where the Alaskan Pipeline is above ground
and fully visible, to an unusual facility, the Poker Flat Rocket
Research Range.

This facility is owned by the University,
but whose work is supported by NASA and NOAA. The facility fires
rockets such as the below to probe the higher atmosphere, particularly
during the Aurora Borealis phenomenon.

A picture of the Aurora from the
Museum at the University.

There we left the truck, and mounted
three ATVs for travel into the watershed research area.

This is the only feasible form
of transportation past some low lying areas, to our ultimate destination,
Caribou Peak. In the lower reaches the path looks like this, but
gets very rutted and rock strewn, with downed trees higher up.

One main site on the Poker Creek
side of the watershed is extensive, with a CR21X handling lots of
data.

This site is in clear line of site
to the top of Caribou Peak, where another data logger location is.

It took us about half an hour with
these powerful small ATVs to reach the peak, where the sparsity
of vegetation, and a threatening lighting and thunderstorm moving
in, told me how severe the environment must be on the peak. But
that also makes the radio line of sight issues a lot simpler, for
a radio stand would not have to be very high. Here is the data logger,
with a CR23X on Caribou Peak.

We were able to see, 4 miles away,
the Rocket Research site clearly. And we could just see the first
data logger site we had passed, on Poker Creek, about 3 miles away.
But we could not see the second site up Little Poker Creek, although
a map analysis says it should not be masked by the terrain, only,
perhaps, tall trees down in the valley.
Once again, only by bringing pairs
of radios, batteries and antennas, can we validate link paths.
With the weather closing in, we
headed back to the Rocket facility, and met with its site managers.
For we had been told that there was a full T-1 Internet connection
between the Rocket Launch facility and the University - the Geophysical
Institute. If we could connect from the data logger to Caribou Peak,
and then from the Peak to the Blockhouse at the Rocket Facility,
we could solve the huge problem of getting the data, serial radio
collected, back to the Arctic Biology Center. This would take some
serial, to ethernet and IP network interface work, and back again
into the PCs, which we had not done before, but which would certainly
be feasible at modest cost.
The Rocket Research staff expressed
a willingness to cooperate fully. Here is look back at Caribou Peak
from the facility.

I concluded that we could usefully
connect up the data loggers identified by Drs. Hinzman and Yoshikawa
adequately, perhaps more easily than those in Bonanza Creek Experimental
Forest. And so returned to the University to hold our exit interview,
where I laid out what it would take to do the job, which, in essence,
would be in three phases over two years.
Phase I -late summer 2000 to spring
2001 - a second, more technical site survey by Hughes and Erickson,
accompanied by Pike and Yoshikawa. Programming over the winter to
do the interfacing which would be needed at the University to move
the data into their data bases and web sites, in XML language, as
it continuously comes in via wireless.
Phase II - Summer of 2001 to spring
2002. Installation of radios at both sites in the summer of 2001.
Monitoring and measuring performance, completing the data links
to the Internet. Observing the reliability of the radio links over
the winter of 2001-2.
Phase III - Spring and summer 2002.
Assisting the LTER staff in installing new radio links to new data
logger sites in the early summer of 2002. Observing the full year
performance of the wireless links. Refining installations for the
next winter. Making the final report on the Project by August 31,
2002, the end of the project.
A seeming consensus having been
reached, I returned to Colorado, and drafted the Supplemental Proposal
for submission to the NSF for immediate action. But not before watching
Mt. McKinley out the aircraft window on the way back.

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