The Mercury

UCT scientists to study Antarctica’s waters

- MERCURY CORRESPOND­ENT

UCT scientists Dr Marcel du Plessis and Isabelle Giddy are part of an internatio­nal study that is attempting to occupy and collect vital measuremen­ts from the least studied place on the planet – the frigid, ice-covered waters of Antarctica.

The project, named ROAM-MIZ (robotic observatio­ns and modelling of the marginal ice zone), is co-led by associate Professor Sebastiaan Swart at the University of Gothenburg and Dr Sarah Nicholson of the Southern Ocean Carbon and Climate Observator­y, which is supported by the South African National Antarctic Programme.

During winter, Antarctic sea ice expands – as an extension of the continent – over an area of the sea large enough to cover the size of South Africa 14 times.

Almost all this sea ice melts away during summer, leaving a layer of fresh water on the surface of the ocean thousands of kilometres wide but only a few tens of metres deep.

The fresh water is very light compared with seawater, which prevents them from mixing vertically. This changes the ocean’s ability to take up heat from the atmosphere.

This study will provide key observatio­ns to help researcher­s understand how the sea ice meltwater in Antarctica grows laterally and deteriorat­es, thereby altering heat uptake by the ocean and impacting the climate.

The vastness and remoteness of the Antarctic and its rapid ice growth and drift mean that the long-term observatio­ns needed cannot be obtained from ships, which only go down to Antarctica for a few weeks a year.

Instead, autonomous underwater vehicles, called gliders, which are self-sufficient and provide researcher­s with a profile of the ocean every few hours will be used.

The measuremen­ts collected by the gliders will inform researcher­s from the UCT Department of Oceanograp­hy, as well as their internatio­nal partners, how the ocean will react to and influence a changing climate.

UCT says the waters off Antarctica are the most difficult to measure through observatio­n. The primary gliders being used are Seagliders. Designed to be small – about 1.5m long – and run on battery power, they can sample the ocean for many months without human interventi­on.

This study will also provide unpreceden­ted data to see the impact of the hurricane-force winds that sweep through a wind belt in the southern hemisphere called the Screaming Sixties. These are the strongest winds in the world. They act in a similar way to a blender at the ocean surface by mixing fresh, surface water with the saltier water below.

Researcher­s are also trying to find out how these storms drive the mixing of heat from the surface down into the water column.

Swart and Nicholson both obtained their PhDs from UCT. Other collaborat­ors come from the US, the UK and Norway.

 ?? LOUISE BIDDLE ?? AUTONOMOUS underwater vehicles will roam the waters of Antarctica for two years collecting informatio­n about the ocean.|
LOUISE BIDDLE AUTONOMOUS underwater vehicles will roam the waters of Antarctica for two years collecting informatio­n about the ocean.|

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