Scientists have discovered deepest point on land
(CNN)A
new study shows that the deepest point on land is under the Denman
Glacier in East Antarctica. Glaciologists at the University of
California, Irvine, were mapping the area only to find that the trough
under the glacier went far deeper than they had imagined.
The
trough is about 3.5 km (about 2 miles) below sea level but there is no
ocean water there. Instead, it is filled with ice flowing from the
interior of the ice sheet towards the coast. The trough measures about
100 km in length and is 20 km wide, according to the study.
This new discovery was presented at the American Geophysical Union's Fall Meeting in San Francisco.
Dr.
Mathieu Morlighem, an associate professor in the Department of Earth
System Science at the University of California at Irvine, is leading
this project.
"The biggest
challenge about the project is that Antarctica is HUGE!" he said,
excitedly. "It's bigger than the U.S. and Mexico combined."
Morlighem
and his team used a new technology called BedMachine to make this
discovery. They developed a new generation ice sheet model but it was
not behaving as expected.
"After
months of investigation, we realized that it was not because we were
missing important processes. It was because the bed topography under the
ice was missing many important features such as troughs, ridges,
valleys, etc," he said.
And because of the size of the area they were trying to map, the process was very time-consuming.
The
team combined radar measurements with high-precision surface motion
data from satellites and snow accumulation from regional climate models
to get a good estimate of the shape of the bed where it had not been
measured.
"We applied this mapping
technique to the entire ice sheet, and we discovered this very deep
valley hidden underneath the ice sheet," Morlighem said.
He
said one of the challenges they faced during the project was gathering
all the available data since there have been many radar surveys, but
done by different institutions in different countries.
They also had some surprises on the way.
"The
main ones are these ridges across the Transantarctic Mountains, Denman
glacier, but also some other glaciers feeding the Ronne Ice Shelf that
seem to be more vulnerable than we thought," Morlighem said.
Morlighem says climate change could impact this region.
"We
now have to monitor this glacier carefully. If its grounding line --
where the ice starts to float -- starts to retreat in this deep canyon,
it could retreat rapidly due to a mechanism called Marine Ice Sheet
Instability." he said. "Glaciers that flow on beds that deepen inland
are unstable, and so the glacier will potentially have to retreat all
the way until the bed rises again, leading to significant sea level
rise. It could be one of the most vulnerable sectors of East Antarctica,
which holds significantly more ice than west Antarctica."
But
there is good news as far as climate change goes. The study says that
major glaciers flowing through the Transantarctic Mountains and across
Victoria Land are found to be protected by broad, stabilizing,
topographic ridges near their grounding lines that reflect the
surrounding topographic relief.
"The
glaciers flowing across the Transantarctic Mountains all have a
pronounced ridge across their troughs," Morlighem said. "These ridges
were unknown and make this sector of the ice sheet extremely resilient
to increase in ocean-induced melting."
In other words, he said, "If the Ross Ice Shelf destabilizes, it should not lead to a collapse of East Antarctica."


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