The Borneo Post

Ice and fire: Antarctic volcano may hold clues to life on Mars

- Juan Restrepo & Juan Barreto

DECEPTION ISLAND, Antarctica: On Deception Island in Antarctica, steam rises from the beaches, and glaciers dot the black slopes of what is actually an active volcano - a rare clash of ice and fire that provides clues to scientists about what life could look like on Mars.

The horseshoe-shaped isle in the South Shetland Islands is the only place in the world where ships can sail into the caldera of an active volcano.

In the waters here, some 420 kilometers (260 miles) from Chile’s Port Williams, fish, krill, anemones and sea sponges survive, while unique species of lichen and moss grow on the surface in an ecosystem of extreme contrasts.

The island, uninhabite­d by people, is home to perhaps the world’s largest colony of chinstrap penguins, seabirds, seals and sea lions.

The volcano has been active for thousands of years, with the most recent eruptions - in 1967, 1969 and 1970 - devastatin­g British and Chilean bases and forcing the evacuation of an Argentine base.

Yet life always returns and thrives on an island where water temperatur­es in steam vents, or fumaroles, have been measured at around 70 degrees Celsius (158 degrees Fahrenheit), even as air temperatur­es can plummet to 28 degrees.

“It is similar to Mars because there what we have is a planet with (a past of) immense volcanic activity ... where currently there are very cold conditions,” Spanish planetary geologist Miguel de Pablo told AFP.

“It is the best possible approximat­ion that we can make to understand Mars without stepping on” that planet, added de Pablo.

A rich history

The analysis of rocks on Deception Island complement­s the work of engineers, scientists and astronomer­s who study Mars from afar.

In 2023, researcher­s with the US space agency NASA concluded that Mars once had a climate with cyclical seasons, conducive to the developmen­t of life, according to evidence found on the red planet by the Curiosity rover.

Scientists believe an immense volcanic eruption changed the planet’s atmosphere and led to the appearance of oceans and rivers that later evaporated.

Even though temperatur­es on Mars are far lower now estimated by NASA at about -153 degrees Celsius - “Antarctic conditions can help us understand if the conditions for the developmen­t of life could, or could have, existed on Mars,” said de Pablo.

Another Mars rover, Perseveran­ce, landed on the planet in February 2021 to look for signs of past microbial life.

The multitaski­ng rover will collect 30 rock and soil samples in sealed tubes to be sent back to Earth sometime in the 2030s for lab analysis.

The South Shetlands are claimed by Britain, Chile and Argentina but are not administer­ed by any one country. The 1959 Antarctic Treaty states they shall be used ‘for peaceful purposes’ and guarantees ‘freedom of scientific investigat­ion’.

Deception Island, first visited by British sealers in 1820, has a rich history, with abandoned scientific bases and an old whaling station rusting in the icy air.

Wilson Andres Rios, a researcher and captain of a Colombian navy frigate conducting a scientific expedition in Antarctica, said the hunting of seals and whales from the island in the early 20th century was ‘indiscrimi­nate’.

In 1931, a Norwegian whaling station on the island closed when the price of whale oil slumped.

Then, in 1944, Britain establishe­d a base there as part of a secret wartime mission to occupy Antarctic territorie­s.

A er several evictions and eruptions, the island is now dedicated to scientific research.

And, under the scientists’ wary eyes, thousands of tourists now arrive on cruises.

That phenomenon, said Natalia Jaramillo, scientific coordinato­r of the Colombian expedition, is ‘worryingly increasing’.

 ?? ?? Colombian researcher Andrea Bonilla Garzon (centre) recover a hydrophone with members of the Colombian research vessel ‘ARC Simon Bolivar’ ship in the Barnart Pt in the south coast of Livingston Island, in the South Shetland Islands archipelag­o.
Colombian researcher Andrea Bonilla Garzon (centre) recover a hydrophone with members of the Colombian research vessel ‘ARC Simon Bolivar’ ship in the Barnart Pt in the south coast of Livingston Island, in the South Shetland Islands archipelag­o.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? View of the remains of the Hector Whaling Company at Whaler’s Bay in Deception Island, in the western Antarctica peninsula.
— AFP photos View of the remains of the Hector Whaling Company at Whaler’s Bay in Deception Island, in the western Antarctica peninsula.
 ?? ?? A chinstrap (Pygoscelis antarcticu­s) penguin is pictured at Deception Island.
A chinstrap (Pygoscelis antarcticu­s) penguin is pictured at Deception Island.
 ?? ?? Tourist takes pictures of a chinstrap (Pygoscelis antarcticu­s) penguin as they visit Deception Island.
Tourist takes pictures of a chinstrap (Pygoscelis antarcticu­s) penguin as they visit Deception Island.
 ?? ?? Tourists visit the remains of the Hector Whaling Company at Whaler’s Bay.
Tourists visit the remains of the Hector Whaling Company at Whaler’s Bay.

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