Voyage to the end of the world: floating lab to explore life in Arctic adrift in ice | TheBriefWire
Voyage to the end of the world: floating lab to explore life in Arctic adrift in ice
Published 2 July 2026 ยท science
An eight-month expedition will set off soon from Norway on a mission to find new species before the climate crisis and pollution changes the northern
An eight-month expedition will set off soon from Norway on a mission to find new species before the climate crisis and pollution changes the northern ocean for ever Six scientists and six crew will travel next month to Kirkenes, a remote Arctic town in Norway near the Russian border, to begin an odyssey to one of the most inhospitable, inaccessible and least-studied regions on Earth.
There, they will climb onboard a futuristic, floating laboratory โ the French-built Tara polar station. They will enter a harsh and isolating environment: months of complete darkness and temperatures as
low as -50C (-58F). Arriving in Norway on 14 August, they will await good conditions and an icebreaker to open a route for them before setting off on an eight-month
voyage, overwintering through long, intense polar nights onboard a 26-metre-long, 16-metre-wide vessel built to be frozen into the pack ice, which will drift slowly over the north pole to Greenland. Continue reading...
Published: July 2, 2026 โข 4:30 PM IST ยท Updated: July 2, 2026 โข 5:09 PM ISTBy TheBriefWire Editorial Team
Key points
An eight-month expedition will set off soon from Norway on a mission to find new species before the climate crisis and pollution changes the northern ocean for ever Six scientists and six crew will travel next month to Kirkenes, a remote Arctic town in Norway near the Russian border, to begin an odyssey to one of the most inhospitable, inaccessible and least-studied regions on Earth.
There, they will climb onboard a futuristic, floating laboratory โ the French-built Tara polar station.
They will enter a harsh and isolating environment: months of complete darkness and temperatures as low as -50C (-58F).
Arriving in Norway on 14 August, they will await good conditions and an icebreaker to open a route for them before setting off on an eight-month voyage, overwintering through long, intense polar nights onboard a 26-metre-long, 16-metre-wide vessel built to be frozen into the pack ice, which will drift slowly over...