Scientists Discover Ancient River System Hidden Under Antarctic Ice
5:1:52 2023-10-24 786

An ancient river system that has not seen the light of day for at least 14 million years has been discovered underneath the East Antarctic Ice Sheet, new research reports.

With ice-penetrating radar and satellite data, Durham University glaciologist Stewart Jamieson and colleagues mapped the topographic features of the landscape hidden beneath the East Antarctic Ice Sheet, to get a better understanding of how the ice sheet has fluctuated over time.

The largest on Earth, the East Antarctic Ice Sheet (EAIS), mostly sits on bedrock above sea level, but it isn't as stable as scientists once thought. With our planet on track to warm more than 2 °C above pre-industrial levels, the EAIS could add nearly half a meter of sea-level rise on top of other ice melt by 2100.

The response of Antarctic ice sheets to global heating is, however, the largest unknown, and yet possibly the greatest contributor to future sea level rise. So scientists are working feverishly to map the EAIS' underbelly and model its future, along with those of other ice sheets.

"We understand the Moon better than East Antarctica," University of Tasmania polar scientist Matt King, an author on the modeling study, said last year. "So, we don't yet fully understand the climate risks that will emerge from this area."

In this new study, Jamieson and colleagues went searching for more granular details of the EAIS' past written in ancient features of the land beneath the Aurora and Schmidt basins, inland of the Denman and Totten glaciers.

"As ice sheets fluctuate, they modify the landscape upon which they rest, leaving a fingerprint," the researchers explain in their published paper. "But it is rare to find unmodified landscapes that record past ice conditions."

The EAIS formed around 34 million years ago when Antarctica iced over and has advanced, retreated, thickened, and thinned, as temperatures fluctuated over geological epochs.

The ice sheet has remained fairly stable for the last 14 million years, covering the vast eastern part of the Antarctic continent, yet the extent of ice sheet retreat during warm intervals remains uncertain.

Scanning the Aurora-Schmidt basins, the team found an ancient landscape 300 kilometers (186 miles) inland from where the present-day ice sheet meets thesea.

It's a small part of a vast continent, but a very revealing one. The area consists of three river-carved 'blocks' separated by deep troughs about 40 kilometers wide.

An intricate network of ridges and valleys covers the blocks, but these features aren't consistent with the slow, modern-day northward ice flow across this part of the continent.

So it's more likely the terrain formed prior to Antarctic glaciation, when rivers crossed the region to a coastline that appeared as the Gondwana supercontinent drifted apart.

Forgive Others   2025-07-23
Reality Of Islam

A Mathematical Approach to the Quran

10:52:33   2024-02-16  

mediation

2:36:46   2023-06-04  

what Allah hates the most

5:1:47   2023-06-01  

allahs fort

11:41:7   2023-05-30  

striving for success

2:35:47   2023-06-04  

Imam Ali Describes the Holy Quran

5:0:38   2023-06-01  

livelihood

11:40:13   2023-05-30  

silence about wisdom

3:36:19   2023-05-29  

Gold remains perfectly solid wh

read more

MOST VIEWS

Importance of Media

9:3:43   2018-11-05

Illuminations

apologize when you are wrong

7:6:7   2022-03-21

remember who supported you

2:2:13   2022-10-08

friendship

2:13:43   2022-05-27

your actions

2:5:14   2023-01-28

logic

12:47:1   2022-12-20

their choice

11:11:59   2023-02-01

pure nature

7:34:7   2023-02-28



IMmORTAL Words
LATEST The Role and Influence of Friends Interpretation of Sura Hud - Verses 114-115 Summary of the Meanings of Patience Switching Off for a Moment Lets Your Brain Do Something Wonderful OpenAI Launches Free, Customizable AI Models in Major Strategic Shift Lightning Kills Way More Trees Than You Would Ever Believe How Can You Save Your Marriage? Interpretation of Sura Hud - Verses 111-113 Importance of Patience in the Light of Traditions Just One Diet Soda a Day May Raise Your Type 2 Diabetes Risk by 38% Gold Does Something Unexpected When Superheated Past Its Melting Point Scientists Found a Mysterious Barrier in The Ocean That Jellyfish Will Not Cross