Lite kjent stoff, men uten politisk snikk-snakk (Red.)
Troops in Greenland see sunlight after
months of night
The military's northernmost base, located north of the Arctic Circle in
a blisteringly cold part of Greenland, doesn't see the Sun for several months
each year.
Posted 10 Hours Ago
People watch the dawn of the first sunlight in months at Pituffik Space
Base. U.S. Space Force photo.
The U.S. military’s northernmost outpost is seeing
brighter days. Literally. The Space Force Guardians at Pituffik Space Base are
seeing sunlight for the first time in three months.
In recent days sunlight crested over the hills
around the American base in Greenland, the first glimpse of natural light since
November. Located at a latitude of 76°32′ North on the western coast of
Greenland, the base is more than 700 miles north of the Arctic Circle and so
close to the North Pole that come winter in the Northern Hemisphere, the Sun
slips out of view from November to February. Guardians at the base celebrated
the return of an actual daybreak on Feb. 15 with activities out in the snow —
it is still winter north of the Arctic Circle after all. Photos shared by Space Force showed troops driving out to watch the Sun rise,
some basking in the rays.
The proximity to the North Pole means that
alongside frigid winters and long nights, troops stationed at Pituffik also get
to see sights such as the aurora borealis.
Pituffik Space Base operates a unique mission.
Home to the 821st Space Base Group, Guardians operate missile detection devices
and early warning systems, while also carrying out several scientific research
projects.
The base, originally named Thule Air Base until
2023 when it transferred to Space Force, was founded in 1951 as a U.S. Air
Force outpost on Greenland, as part of NATO agreements. Alongside its Cold
War-focused missile detection systems, the base’s airfield and deep water port
make a strategic location. Troops that are stationed there though have to deal
with the harsh conditions of being that far north in a rough and cold
terrain. There was a second base on Greenland, Camp Century, built at the end of the 1950s underground. It was meant as a secret
test location for nuclear missile launchers. That base, long abandoned,
was rediscovered under the snow last year by NASA radar.
Now Guardians get to enjoy two months of some kind
of a normal day. But there is a flip side to the winter coin. The very location
that means months of endless night mean that between May and November the Sun
never fully sets, enveloping Pituffik Space Base in constant brightness.
According to a NASA report on the outpost, Pituffik gets about a month of “normal
sunlight time” twice a year, during the spring and fall.
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