Podcast explores ĄÖ»¢Ö±²„ā€™s climate change through sound

A small human figure traversing a vast glacier
Photo by Jordan Jenckes
A researcher traverses the Grewingk Glacier to study climate change.

Images and data representing climate change are ubiquitous, but Theresa Soley asks what climate change sounds like.

In a new podcast series called ā€œ,ā€ Soley, a ĄÖ»¢Ö±²„ alumna, takes listeners on an audio tour of climate change in ĄÖ»¢Ö±²„, weaving together a place-based narrative from soundscapes and sonic textures intertwined with scientific and personal accounts.

Each episode defines a climate change concept and introduces ĄÖ»¢Ö±²„ns like glaciologists, long-time residents and traditional Indigenous knowledge bearers. Notable guests have included glaciologist Eric Petersen, Tlingit Indigenous science expert Judy DaxĢ±ootsĆŗ Ramos and marine biology student Court Pegas.

The newest episode, ā€œAcoustic Refuge,ā€ is being released June 16. This will be the fifth episode of Season One, which has focused on climate change impacts to glacial landscapes. ā€œAcoustic Refugeā€ homes in on how auditory changes affect animals living in tidewater glacier environments.

Soley earned a masterā€™s degree through UAFā€™s One Health program. The podcast was inspired in part by the programā€™s approach to studying health in the circumpolar North. One Health is an approach to public policy and research that focuses on the ways that environmental, animal and human health are interconnected

ā€œItā€™s simple really ā€” in order to optimize our health, we need to be aware of whatā€™s happening to other animals and the environment we all share,ā€ said Dr. Laurie Meythaler-Mullins, a veterinarian and fellow One Health alumna who is featured in ā€œAcoustic Refuge.ā€

ā€œIce and Fireā€ embodies this holistic outlook by examining how climate change affects environments and, by extension, the animals and humans living within them.

Future ā€œIce and Fireā€ seasons will explore other areas of climate change in ĄÖ»¢Ö±²„. Season Two focuses on thawing permafrost.

Episodes are available for listening through podcast services, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher and Google Podcasts.

Soley created ā€œIce and Fireā€ with support from the ĄÖ»¢Ö±²„ National Science Foundation Established Program for Stimulating Competitive Research, the ĄÖ»¢Ö±²„ Center for Innovation, Commercialization, and Entrepreneurship, and the Wrangell Mountain Center. The series is produced by Mary Auld, assistant director at the Montana Media Lab.

Listeners can support the continued production of the ā€œIce and Fireā€ podcast by listening, subscribing,  sharing episodes,  and participating in a on the ā€œ.

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