From Military.com:
“How the military helps keep
research operations in Antarctica going”
(Three LC-130 aircraft sit on the
flightline during Operation Deep Freeze at Antarctica's McMurdo Research
Station.)
The seasonal U.S. military
mission that supports scientists and military personnel in Antarctica —
Operation Deep Freeze — is well underway, the Air Force confirmed. In August,
an Air Force C-17 Globemaster III, assigned to Joint Base Lewis-McChord in
Washington, completed the first winter fly, or WinFly, mission of the 2022-23
operational season. The aircraft brought needed equipment and resources to the
National Science Foundation’s United States Antarctic Program, which is located
at McMurdo Station, the largest community in Antarctica. “The aircraft
delivered approximately 184 people and 139K pounds of cargo,” Capt. Brandon
Romano, a spokesperson for Pacific Air Forces, told Military Times. “It also
returned 22 people and 75K pounds of cargo to Christchurch, New Zealand.”
Christchurch Airport, which acts
as the main gateway to reaching Antarctica, tweeted last week that a C-17 was
due to land there in the coming days in order to take people and machinery “to
the ice.” The Department of Defense provides supplies and assists in moving
personnel to and from the southernmost continent through its Joint Task
Force-Support Forces Antarctica, according to a Pacific Air Forces release. “As
we emerge from the pandemic, Joint Task Force-Support Forces Antarctica is
resuming ‘normal’ operations,” Romano added. “This means more cargo will be
transported via more flights than last year.” Romano also said that for the
first time since 2019, with help from the Army’s 7th Transportation Battalion,
JTF-SFA is using a floating, portable system for offloading cargo when a
traditional port is unavailable.
Operation Deep Freeze, which
dates back to 1955, has often involved support elements from across the Air
Force, Navy, Army and Coast Guard. The unique mission is considered to be
difficult even by those involved because of the harsh temperature and
geographic remoteness. “Something you learn being out there on the ice for any
amount of time, is that things can go very wrong, very quickly,” Maj. Matthew
Wimmer, a 56th Operations Group flight surgeon, said in a March statement. “As a physician, I learned a lot about medical
evacuations in unregulated areas,” he added. “The weather is always a factor
when determining the course of action we take. Due to the remoteness of the
deployment, it’s all on our team … to stabilize the patient, decide on medical
procedures and validate them for transfer.”
At the Amundsen–Scott South Pole
Station, another Antarctic research hub, temperatures this time of year can
reach minus 18 degrees Fahrenheit, the release said. Despite the conditions,
the military’s annual efforts to support the teams in one of the coldest and
most forbidding parts of the globe are continuing. “The 2022-2023 ODF season is
another opportunity to demonstrate our military dedication, ingenuity and labor
in support of the Antarctic mission,” Lt. Col. Matthew Johnson, JTF-SFA acting
deputy commander, said in the release. Romano said two additional WinFly
missions are scheduled to take more people and cargo to McMurdo Station over
the course of several days. He added that the current mission will run through
October, while the operation’s season will likely run through the end of July
2023.
^ I have been fascinated with Antarctica
and the Research Stations there since I was a little kid so this fits right
with that. ^
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