Friday, April 6, 2012

MCMURDO STATION ANTARCTICA GETS HELP FROM THE ARMY

FROM AMERICAN FORCES PRESS SERVICE

The crane aboard the USNS Green Wave hoists pieces of a modular causeway system at McMurdo Station, Antarctica. The Army's 331st Transportation Company built a pier to unload supplies for the National Science Foundation base. U.S. Army photo by Capt. Christina Shelton  


Mission to McMurdo: Helping Science in Antarctica
By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, April 3, 2012 - A recent mission for U.S. Transportation Command proves the service members of the command can get just about anything, anywhere.

The command stepped to the fore by building a pier in the southernmost harbor in the world: McMurdo Sound, Antarctica. This enabled the National Science Foundation to re-supply workers at McMurdo Station, the largest community on the frozen continent.

Normally, the re-supply ship docks at an ice pier built out into the sound. The ice bridge usually can take the weight of trucks, containers, heavy equipment and supplies. But this year, that was not the case.
"We were notified in November that the ice pier that is used accept cargo at McMurdo was unusable this year," said Air Force Col. Howard "Mac" McArthur, the West Branch chief at U.S. Transportation Command. To accept the heavy use, the ice pier has to be about 20 feet thick. This year, it was 9 feet. The National Science Foundation, which runs the Antarctic research effort, had a problem.
Whatever they were going to do had to happen quickly. About 150 personnel spend the winter at McMurdo Station, and there is only one annual supply ship for the entire year. It arrives just before winter sets in, and carries food, scientific instruments, general supplies and everything else needed to run the station and supply other research stations. Another ship – this year, the Maersk Perry – brings in about 6 million gallons of fuel.

"Through collaboration between Transcom, Pacific Command's Joint Task Force Support Forces to Antarctica and the National Science Foundation, it was determined that the Army's modular causeway system would work," said Army Lt. Col. Rich Whittingslow, Pacific Command branch chief at Transcom.
In early December, Army Capt. Christina Shelton, commander of the 331st Transportation Company based at Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Va., got a phone call telling her to prepare her unit for movement to Antarctica. "I thought they were joking," she said.
The mission was to transport the system to Port Hueneme, Calif., load it aboard the USNS Green Wave and send it to Antarctica. Soldiers then would fly to McMurdo to be in place when the ship arrived, and build the pier so that the supplies aboard the Green Wave could be off-loaded.
Once that was done, they would have to disassemble the pier, load it back on the ship and go home. But nothing like it had been done before.

"We were very excited, because we train year-round for any type of global contingency operations, whether it is warfighting, humanitarian operations and anything of that nature," Shelton said.
But it usually is just training, and this "was a real-world mission," she said. "It was a chance to put our expertise to work."

Soldiers loaded the gear onto 52 commercial trucks for the trip to Port Hueneme. They loaded aboard the Green Wave, and the ship set sail Jan. 16.

Shelton knew there would be challenges, not the least of which was temperature. When the soldiers arrived Feb. 10, the temperature was a relatively balmy 28 degrees. "It quickly got colder, and much windier," the captain said. Temperatures dropped well below zero, and with the wind chill it was like working in 60-below-zero temperatures.

The National Science Foundation issued the soldiers the full set of gear to work in these conditions. "We had cold weather parkas, bunny boots, extreme cold-weather gloves, balaclavas, special wool socks – everything we needed to build the pier," Shelton said.

The Green Wave arrived at McMurdo Station on Feb. 13. Joining the soldiers were 50 sailors from the Navy Cargo Handling Battalion in Norfolk, Va.

Shelton separated the soldiers into two shifts – one day and one night. But since the sun was shining 24 hours a day, it took some effort to get used to the "night" shift, she said.
The first two items off the Green Wave were two working tugs, used to push and pull the pieces of the causeway in place. They next built the floating portions of the causeway aboard the ship and then lowered them into the water, where they fastened them together. These so-called "strings" were 80 feet long by 8 feet wide. "You put three strings together to make one section," Shelton said. They made the pier six sections wide and two deep.

The whole process took two and a half days. "We would have been done sooner, but it was the first time we had built these aboard ship and the first time we worked with sailors manning the on-board cranes," Shelton said. "We got better as we went along."
It took eight days to unload the ship.

Finally, the soldiers took 36 hours to take the pier apart and reload it aboard the Green Wave. The 331st soldiers were on the ground in Antarctica from Feb. 10-29. They flew to Christchurch, New Zealand, from Antarctica, and arrived back in Virginia in March.
The National Science Foundation is working to rebuild the ice pier for next year, but it may not be ready. If that's the case, they may need the steel pier again.
"With what we know now, we can do it even better next year," Shelton said.

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