Scientists have drilled into one of the most isolated depths in all of the world’s oceans: a hidden shore of Antarctica that sits under 740 meters of ice, hundreds of kilometers in from the sea edge of a major Antarctic ice shelf. Humans have never glimpsed this place; reaching it required seven years of planning and 450 tonnes of fuel and gear. But understanding what is happening down there, so far from human view, will be crucial for predicting the future amid rising temperatures. The researchers, whom I reached in their remote location by satellite phone, report that they have already discovered a curious signature of environmental change, with potential implications for the stability of the enormous ice sheet.
The grounding zone—where the ice lifts off the muddy bottom of what would be the Antarctic shoreline if there were no ice, and begins to float on the ocean—serves as a brake, controlling the speed of the glaciers feeding into it. And speed is crucial when it comes to global warming. Glaciers on the perimeter of West Antarctica are receiving increased heat from , which melt ice from the grounding line, releasing the brake and causing the glaciers to flow and shed icebergs into the ocean more quickly. Some glaciers along the coast of West Antarctica have already accelerated by up to 60 percent due to this process.
Reed Scherer, a micropaleontologist, is studying tiny fossilswere covered by shallow, open sea rather than glaciers.The Whillans Ice Stream and a handful of major glaciers on either side of it are considered relatively resistant to these ocean-driven effects. In 2007, for example, a team of researchers using ice-penetrating radar reported finding a wedge of sediment 30 meters thick at the grounding zone of the Whillans Ice Stream. This sandy heap actually causes the oozing ice to slow, pile up and thicken slightly behind it—providing a buffer that may stabilize the ice sheet in the face of those warm currents. That’s the theory, at least, but no one had ever looked directly at a grounding zone until this week. The team’s first glimpse already calls into question our long-held assumptions about the long-term stability of these glaciers.
Muck means life
The Antarctic summer temperature hovered in the 20s Fahrenheit (–6.5 to –1.5 degrees Celsius) last week—warmer than parts of the American Midwest right now—and earlier this week it hit a sweltering 34 degrees F (1 degree C). The single-person sleeping tents are slowly sinking as the ambient body heat of their occupants, along with the absorption of warmth from 24-hour daylight melts the snow underneath. Tristy Vick-Majors, a microbiology graduate student from Montana State University describes a “controlled face plant” maneuver required to enter her own sunken quarters. Sleeping isn’t all that easy, by the way. The tents, ironically, can become uncomfortably warm. The scientists are working round-the-clock shifts, sometimes lasting 20 hours. And just to make things really fun, two diesel generators, each the size of an automobile, roar nonstop as they crank out 450 kilowatts of electricity to power the drill.
A team of ice drillers (a rare profession, but crucial in Antarctica) spent three days boring a hole through the ice last week. They did this using a jet of hot water gushing from the end of a Kevlar hose a kilometer long and as big around as an ankle. As the hole deepened, the hose was unreeled progressively into it.
The drillers encountered an unexpected glitch part way down but one that is scientifically interesting. The drill’s filters, which clean water being pumped out of the borehole, became clogged with black dust—“volcanic ashes from some past large volcanic eruption,” speculated Slawek Tulaczyk, a glaciologist from the University of California, Santa Cruz, who has studied this region for two decades and co-leads the drilling project. Finding a layer of ash in the ice wouldn’t be surprising: the West Antarctic Ice Sheet straddles a broad continental rift that is known to harbor volcanoes, some of them exposed on the surface and others sealed under ice. Ash spewed out of those volcanoes has periodically ; that ash, covered by falling snow over thousands of years, compresses into a thin layer suspended in the accumulating ice.
The camera soon emerged from this “black zone” (as people at camp are calling it) into an open expanse of crystal clear seawater beneath the ice. This thin sliver of ocean reaching under the ice turned out to be 10 meters deep, and the camera came to rest on the bottom beneath it, revealing it to be muddy and strewn with pebbles—a flat, barren tract, devoid of any obvious signs of large marine life such as brittle stars, sponges or worms.
The pebbles scattered on the bottom offered an immediate clue about the physical environment beneath the ice sheet here. “You don’t get that sort of material on a regular seafloor,” Powell says. “Normally at the ocean floor, at 700 meters depth, what you’re accumulating is very fine material”— dust or silt small enough that it could be carried by currents or winds far from land without settling out. This is what the team found two years ago when they drilled into , 95 kilometers upstream of the grounding zone; the ice there is melting off the underside of the glacier very slowly, at a rate of several dime-thicknesses per year, as heat seeps up from Earth’s deep interior. But here at the grounding zone the underside of the ice may be melting more quickly. “These stones were sitting on the seafloor after having dropped out from the ice as it was melting,” Powell says. That information could eventually help them estimate an important number: the rate at which the ocean water is melting ice at the grounding zone.
Chomsky: We Are All – Fill in the Blank.
This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service - if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read the FAQ at http://ift.tt/jcXqJW.
No comments:
Post a Comment