Around much of Antarctica, the ice sheet extends out into the Southern Ocean to form floating ice shelves. Such shelves can be more than 1500 m thick and can have areas of several hundred thousand square kilometers. Interactions between the shelves and the water beneath them can have globally significant effects, since melted ice can cool and freshen the deep ocean waters. To learn more about the largely unexplored water cavities underneath ice shelves, a British team sent an autonomous underwater vehicle on a 53-km roundtrip excursion underneath the Fimbul Ice Shelf along the Princess Martha Coast. The researchers’ analysis of the data they collected on the topography of the shelf base, the local current, and the water’s temperature and salinity reveals a complex environment. Among their findings is that the base of the ice shelf—long assumed to be smooth, based on the shelf’s surface features—shows regions of pronounced roughness,...
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1 June 2006
June 01 2006
Citation
Richard J. Fitzgerald; Underneath an Antarctic ice shelf. Physics Today 1 June 2006; 59 (6): 21. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4797384
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