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...woman should be quiet, calm, mild, and understanding, and you should always have the time to listen to men and children," Heiberg said...

Author: By Eric S. Solowey, | Title: Ferarro, Women Leaders Announce New Institute | 3/25/1988 | See Source »

...Astrid Heiberg, a member of the Norwegian Parliament, described a dichotomy in Norwegian politics along the lines of gender, saying that men and women are expected to have different characteristics...

Author: By Eric S. Solowey, | Title: Ferarro, Women Leaders Announce New Institute | 3/25/1988 | See Source »

...says Paleobotanist James Basinger of the University of Saskatchewan. "But then ) you look around, and you're in a desert. The only trees are dwarf willows one and two inches high." The sparse growth surrounding the half square mile of fallen trees is not surprising: the location is Axel Heiberg Island, less than 700 miles from the North Pole in the Canadian Arctic, an arid, frigid region hardly conducive to the growth of any vegetation, let alone large trees. Then how did a forest thrive? The answer, says Basinger, is that the stumps and logs are 45 million years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Unearthing a Frozen Forest | 9/22/1986 | See Source »

First to spot the fossil forest was Paul Tudge, a helicopter pilot who has been ferrying Geological Survey scientists to and from remote sites on Axel Heiberg and Ellesmere for years. He had once seen McMillan's fossil forest, and on a flight to Axel Heiberg in July 1985, Tudge recalls, "I saw the same sort of stumps, but many, many of them." He later returned to the site, landed nearby, collected samples and brought them to Basinger, who immediately began planning this summer's expedition. Aided by a grant from the Geological Survey and accompanied by another fossil-forest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Unearthing a Frozen Forest | 9/22/1986 | See Source »

While continental drift has been relocating other land masses over the past 45 million years, Axel Heiberg Island has remained relatively stationary in its Arctic home. The fact that lush forests could have grown so far north indicates that the climate there was once far more hospitable. In fact, scientists have long known that during the early part of the Tertiary period, which began about 65 million years ago, the entire planet was warmer, probably due to carbon dioxide that spewed into the atmosphere during movements of the earth's crust. The result was a greenhouse effect, in which...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Unearthing a Frozen Forest | 9/22/1986 | See Source »

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