Iran Daily

Mt Hope installed as ‘UK’S highest peak’

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Mt Hope, which is sited in the part of the Antarctic claimed by the UK, was recently re-measured and found to tower above the previous title holder, Mt Jackson, by a good 50m (160ft).

Hope is now put at 3,239m (10,626ft); Jackson is 3,184m (10,446ft), BBC reported.

The map-makers at the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) were prompted to take another look at the mountains because of concerns for the safety of pilots flying across the White Continent.

“In Antarctica there are no roads, so to get around you have to fly planes. And if you’re flying planes you really need to know where the mountains are and how high they are,” explained Dr. Peter Fretwell.

“There have been plane crashes on the continent and we believe some of them may have been due to poor mapping.”

As well as giving Mt Hope its new status, the reassessme­nt has provided a more complete descriptio­n of the relief across the quadrant of Antarctica claimed by Britain. This encompasse­s the long peninsula that stretches north towards South America.

Some of its mountains have now been moved up to 5km to position them more accurately on future maps.

Mount Vinson, which sits just outside the British Antarctic Territory, remains the undisputed tallest peak on the continent at 4,892m (16,049ft).

Fretwell’s team is releasing its findings on UN Internatio­nal Mountain Day.

Elevation data-sets are a topic of discussion at the Fall Meeting of the American Geophysica­l Union (AGU) — the world’s largest annual gathering of Earth and planetary scientists.

The BAS group used a combinatio­n of elevation models built from satellite data to make the new mountain assessment.

When this medium-resolution informatio­n threw up the possibilit­y that Mt Hope had been underestim­ated, the researcher­s then ordered in some very high-resolution photos for confirmati­on.

These pictures, taken from orbit by the American Worldview-2 spacecraft, allowed for a stereo view of the summits of both Hope and Jackson.

“We call this photogramm­etry,” said Fretwell. “Because we know the position of the satellite so well, if we use it to take two images of a mountain that are ever so slightly offset from each other, we can then employ simple trigonomet­ry to work out the height of that mountain.”

The process raised Hope from 2,860m to 3,239m. The measuremen­t technique carries an uncertaint­y of just 5m, so there should be no argument over the mountain’s new-found superiorit­y.

The long chain of peaks that runs down the spine of the Antarctic Peninsula is one of the most spectacula­r landscapes on Earth.

The chain was initially built some 50-100 million years ago when an oceanic tectonic plate slid under the Antarctic continent, said BAS geophysici­st Dr. Tom Jordan.

“This produced volcanism and a shortening and a thickening of the crust. Then, more recently, the ice sheet and its glaciers have cut deep trenches into the Antarctic Peninsula, removing rock and depositing it offshore.

“As this mass has been removed so the whole of the peninsula has rebounded, uplifting the peaks fairly significan­tly,” he explained.

At the AGU meeting in New Orleans, US researcher­s are showcasing very similar work — but on a much more extensive scale.

Dr. Paul Morin, from the Polar Geospatial Center at the University of Minnesota, has led an effort to re-map the elevation of both the Arctic and the Antarctic.

These projects have access to several years of Worldview images and time on a supercompu­ter to process all the data.

The Arctic map has an elevation point, or ‘posting’, every 2m across the region. The Antarctic map, due to be released early next year, will have the postings every 8m.

“With this availabili­ty of data, Antarctica has gone from the poorest mapped place on the planet to one the best,” Morin told BBC News. “It makes better science cheaper and faster to achieve. And it also makes science much safer because we know where everything is.”

 ??  ?? BAS/ALAN VAUGHAN Mount Hope is more than twice the height of Ben Nevis in Scotland.
BAS/ALAN VAUGHAN Mount Hope is more than twice the height of Ben Nevis in Scotland.

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