Ice Camp SARGO was the remote hub of operations for the multi-national naval operation Ice Exercise 2016 (ICEX-16), held in March of that year. Over a three-day period in early March, continuous recordings of the under-ice soundscape were collected with receivers deployed at various depths through first-year ice in the vicinity of the ice camp as it drifted westward across the Beaufort Sea approximately 175 nm north of Prudhoe Bay, Alaska. A significant reduction in the strength of easterly winds resulted in deceleration of the ice sheet during the period of observation, inducing notable ice cracking and ridging events near the camp. Ice sheet movement slowed from about 0.5 knots early in the test to virtually coming to a halt near the end of the recording period. Sounds from naturally occurring and anthropogenic sources in the 10-Hz to 10-kHz band detected in the recordings were analyzed in connection to the origins of the sound and correlated to varying environment conditions including wind speed and ice motion. Results show a wide variety of persistent and transient sound sources contribute to the total soundscape at this remote location. Comparisons to other soundscape observations in the region are discussed.