{"id":63047,"date":"2020-08-27T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2020-08-28T06:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/researcher-recalls-lonely-night-spent-in-fiberglass-hut-on-volcanic-craters-lip\/"},"modified":"2020-08-27T22:30:00","modified_gmt":"2020-08-28T06:30:00","slug":"researcher-recalls-lonely-night-spent-in-fiberglass-hut-on-volcanic-craters-lip","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/researcher-recalls-lonely-night-spent-in-fiberglass-hut-on-volcanic-craters-lip\/","title":{"rendered":"Researcher recalls lonely night spent in fiberglass hut on volcanic crater’s lip"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Ned Rozell<\/strong><\/ins><\/p>\n Early in his career, on a wet, windy, foggy night, Guy Tytgat checked into the loneliest hotel in the Aleutians. His room was 4 feet wide and 5 feet tall, made of fiberglass, and perched on the lip of a volcanic crater.<\/p>\n Tytgat did not enjoy the evening he shared with 420 pounds of batteries, an antenna and seismic equipment, but he is thankful the little gray hut was there.<\/p>\n Tytgat is a geophysicist with the Alaska Volcano Observatory at University of Alaska Fairbank’s Geophysical Institute. For more than 20 years, he has installed and repaired seismic stations across Alaska, from 14,000 feet high on Mount Wrangell to Umnak Island in the Aleutians.<\/p>\n In the early 2000s, he spent the night crammed in an equipment hut on a volcano. Over an outdoor lunch, he recently told a story of when Alaska fieldwork does not go as planned.<\/p>\n