Current:Home > ScamsScientists discover hidden landscape "frozen in time" under Antarctic ice for millions of years -WealthTrail Solutions
Scientists discover hidden landscape "frozen in time" under Antarctic ice for millions of years
View
Date:2025-04-15 20:01:17
Scientists revealed Tuesday that they had discovered a vast, hidden landscape of hills and valleys carved by ancient rivers that has been "frozen in time" under the Antarctic ice for millions of years.
This landscape, which is bigger than Belgium, has remained untouched for potentially more than 34 million years, but human-driven global warming could threaten to expose it, the British and American researchers warned.
"It is an undiscovered landscape — no one's laid eyes on it," Stewart Jamieson, a glaciologist at the UK's Durham University and the lead author of the study, told AFP.
"What is exciting is that it's been hiding there in plain sight," Jamieson added, emphasizing that the researchers had not used new data, only a new approach.
The land underneath the East Antarctic Ice Sheet is less well known than the surface of Mars, Jamieson said.
The main way to "see" beneath it is for a plane overhead to send radio waves into the ice and analyze the echoes, a technique called radio-echo sounding.
But doing this across the continent — Antarctica is bigger than Europe — would pose a huge challenge.
So the researchers used existing satellite images of the surface to "trace out the valleys and ridges" more than two kilometers below, Jamieson said.
The undulating ice surface is a "ghost image" that drapes gently over these spikier features, he added.
When combined with radio-echo sounding data, an image emerged of a river-carved landscape of plunging valleys and sharply peaked hills similar to some currently on the Earth's surface.
It was like looking out the window of a long-haul flight and seeing a mountainous region below, Jamieson said, comparing the landscape to the Snowdonia area of northern Wales.
The area, stretching across 32,000 square kilometers (12,000 square miles), was once home to trees, forests and probably animals.
But then the ice came along and it was "frozen in time," Jamieson said.
Exactly when sunshine last touched this hidden world is difficult to determine, but the researchers are confident it has been at least 14 million years.
Jamieson said his "hunch" is that it was last exposed more than 34 million years ago, when Antarctica first froze over.
Some of the researchers had previously found a city-size lake under the Antarctic ice, and the team believes there are other ancient landscapes down there yet to be discovered.
Tipping point for a "runaway reaction"
The authors of the study said global warming could pose a threat to their newly discovered landscape.
"We are now on course to develop atmospheric conditions similar to those that prevailed" between 14 to 34 million years ago, when it was three to seven degrees Celsius warmer (roughly seven to 13 degrees Fahrenheit) than currently, they wrote in the journal Nature Communications.
Jamieson emphasized that the landscape is hundreds of kilometers inland from the edge of the ice, so any possible exposure would be "a long way off."
The fact that retreating ice over past warming events — such as the Pliocene period, three to 4.5 million years ago — did not expose the landscape, was cause for hope, he added.
But it remains unclear what the tipping point would be for a "runaway reaction" of melting, he said.
The study was released a day after scientists warned that the melting of the neighboring West Antarctic Ice Sheet is likely to substantially accelerate in the coming decades, even if the world meets its ambitions to limit global warming.
Earlier this year, a massive piece of Antarctica's Brunt Ice Shelf — a chunk about the size of two New York Cities — broke free.
The Brunt Ice Shelf lies across the Weddell Sea from the site of another ice shelf that's made headlines, the Larsen C ice shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula. Last year, the Larsen C ice shelf — which was roughly the size of New York City and was long considered to be stable — collapsed into the sea.
Glacier experts have warned that some of the world's bigger glaciers could disappear within a generation without a dramatic reduction in greenhouse gas emissions.
Traditionally, glacial ice builds up during the winter and provides vital water for crops, transit and millions of people on multiple continents during the summer as it slowly melts, feeding rivers.
"They make it very visible," Matthias Huss, the head of GLAMOS, an organization that monitors glaciers in Switzerland and collected the data for the academy's report, told CBS News last month. "People can really understand what is happening, with huge glaciers disappearing and shrinking. This is much more impressive than seeing another graph with rising temperatures."
- In:
- Climate Change
- Antarctica
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Banners purportedly from Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel say gang has sworn off sales of fentanyl
- Part of Ohio’s GOP-backed K-12 education overhaul will take effect despite court order
- Amendment aimed at reforming Ohio’s troubled political mapmaking system edges toward 2024 ballot
- 3 years after the NFL added a 17th game, the push for an 18th gets stronger
- More than 100 dolphins found dead in Brazilian Amazon as water temperatures soar
- Rookie Devon Witherspoon scores on 97-yard pick six as Seahawks dominate Giants
- Stevie Nicks setlist: Here are all the songs on her can't-miss US tour
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- A federal appeals court blocks a grant program for Black female entrepreneurs
Ranking
- British golfer Charley Hull blames injury, not lack of cigarettes, for poor Olympic start
- Judge blocks Wisconsin school district policy allowing students to choose their pronouns
- Suspect in kidnapping of 9-year-old Charlotte Sena in upstate New York identified
- Giants' season is already spiraling out of control after latest embarrassment in prime time
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- Niger’s junta says jihadis kill 29 soldiers as attacks ramp up
- John Legend Doppelgänger Has The Voice Judges Doing a Double Take After His Moving Performance
- Army officer pepper-sprayed during traffic stop asks for a new trial in his lawsuit against police
Recommendation
North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
Wisconsin Democrat Katrina Shankland announces bid to unseat US Rep. Derrick Van Orden
Mother's quest for justice continues a year after Black man disappeared
Reese Witherspoon’s Daughter Ava Phillippe Details “Intense” Struggle With Anxiety
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
A blast at an illegal oil refinery site kills at least 15 in Nigeria, residents say
Adam Devine, wife Chloe Bridges expecting first child together: 'Very exciting stuff!'
It's not all bad news: Wonderful and wild stories about tackling climate change