by Fredrik Isaksson, Emma Giesen and Peiyuan Zhang

The boat ride took three hours and a local Norwegian guided the tour. We saw puffins and seagulls from the boat. The guide also pointed out some deserted coal mines and settlements. After passing through Billefjorden, our boat stopped at Petunia Bay where we loaded our equipments on the Zodiac. It took three trips and a lot of team work to transport all the people, equipment and two dogs to the shore. Luckily the weather improved as we started to set up the tents at the camp site. The fog was now gone and the sun was shining on the snowy sedimentary mountains surrounding the bay.

The view from our site is great. On the other side of the bay we can see Skottehytta and in the distant we can hear the cracking from the Nordenskjöld Glacier. The sound is similar to thunder, spreading through the landscape, making us feel quite small. The vegetation in this area consists of low growing flowers, mosses and grasses between the rocks. This evening we spend combining geology, hiking and dinner cooking at 78 degrees north.
Photo credit: Swedish Polar Research Secretariat
This article is one in a series of blog entries written by University of Illinois students who traveled during summer 2013 to Stockholm, Sweden and Svalbard, Norway to participate in the interdisciplinary course, “Environment and Society in a Changing Arctic,” provided by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and co-organized with KTH Royal Institute of Technology. Course participants from both universities learn about issues related to climate change and the Arctic, capped by an excursion to conduct field research near the Arctic Circle. This program is partially supported by the European Union Center through a European Union Center of Excellence grant, and is an initiative of the Illinois-Sweden Program for Educational Research Exchange (INSPIRE). Student blog entries also appear on the web site of the Swedish Polar Research Secretariat.
