Dayton Daily News

Antarctica’s valleys, peaks may hold clues

Scientists say they could contribute to rising sea levels.

- By Kristine Phillips Washington Post

Mountain ranges and valleys hundreds of miles long have been sitting deep beneath Western Antarctica’s vast ice region, a discovery that scientists say could contribute to rising global sea levels.

A team of British researcher­s used “ice penetratin­g radar” to map the subglacial landscape, which they say adds a key piece of evidence to understand the frozen continent’s past, present and future behavior. The researcher­s discovered three valleys linking Antarctica’s two major parts: the Western Antarctic Ice Sheet and the far bigger Eastern Antarctic Ice Sheet.

The newly discovered land forms prevent ice from East Antarctica from flowing through West Antarctica and to the coast. But as ice sheets thin because of warming temperatur­es, these valleys and mountain ranges could “increase the speed and rate at which ice flows out from the center of Antarctica to its edges, leading to an increase in global sea levels,” said Kate Winter, the study’s lead author and a research follow at Northumbri­a University.

“Understand­ing how the East and West Antarctica ice sheets interact is fundamenta­l to our understand­ing of past, present and future global sea level,” said Neil Ross, a senior lecturer at Newcastle University.

The biggest of the valleys, called Foundation Trough, is 217 miles long, nearly equal to the distance between Washington, District of Columbia, and New York City. Its width is more than 20 miles, longer than Manhattan island.

The other valley, called Patuxent Trough, is nearly 200 miles long and 9 miles wide. The smallest, the Offset Rift Basin, is 93 miles long and 18 miles wide.

The research was part of the European Space Agency’s PolarGAP project, an ambitious mission to collect data about the Earth’s global gravity field, and was published earlier this month in the Geophysica­l Research Letters journal.

Fausto Ferracciol­i, principal investigat­or of the PolarGAP project, said the findings provide a significan­t window into the South Pole region, “one of the least understood frontiers in the whole of Antarctica.”

“These new PolarGAP data gives us both insights into how the landscape beneath the ice influences present ice flow, and a better understand­ing of how the parts of the great Antarctic ice sheets near the South Pole can, and cannot, evolve in response to glaciologi­cal change around their margins,” Ferracciol­i said.

The discovery was a surprise to researcher­s.

Winter told NBC News that they had expected to find a mountainou­s region, but not the enormous size of the land forms.

Research has shown that Antarctica’s coastal glaciers, particular­ly in West Antarctica, are retreating at an alarming rate, raising concerns about the massive continent’s potential contributi­on to rising sea levels.

Last month, a satellite survey revealed 10 percent of Antarctica’s coastal glaciers are moving quickly back toward the center of the continent as they melt below, The Washington Post reported. In West Antarctica, more than 20 percent of coastal glaciers were retreating faster than 25 meters, or 82 feet, per year. The situation isn’t as bad in East Antarctica, although the area’s largest glacier is also retreating at a fast rate.

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 ?? CORUM/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? An aerial view of the edge of the Ross Ice Shelf, in Antarctica, in 2017. Scientists are racing to understand what is happening to the ice shelf as the planet warms around it.JONATHAN
CORUM/THE NEW YORK TIMES An aerial view of the edge of the Ross Ice Shelf, in Antarctica, in 2017. Scientists are racing to understand what is happening to the ice shelf as the planet warms around it.JONATHAN

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