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Antarctica

A yellow submarine-shaped autonomous underwater vehicle hangs from a cable over the side of ship as technicians and scientists look on.
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Exploring a Warm Water Inflow Below an Antarctic Ice Shelf

Sarah Derouin, Science Writer by Sarah Derouin 5 December 20225 December 2022

Researchers guided an autonomous underwater submarine to capture the first direct observations of a warm water current flowing in below the Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf in Antarctica.

Satellite view of an ice shelf and sea ice
Posted inResearch Spotlights

A Close Look at Melting Below Antarctica’s Largest Ice Shelf

Rachel Fritts, Science Writer by Rachel Fritts 28 October 202228 October 2022

Radar data reveal where, when, and how fast the base of the Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf has been losing mass in recent years.

The research vessel Nathaniel B. Palmer studies the Thwaites Glacier in 2019.
Posted inNews

Seafloor Reveals a Period of Rapid Retreat for Thwaites Glacier

Javier Barbuzano, Science Writer by Javier Barbuzano 13 October 202225 January 2023

New high-resolution seafloor imagery shows a series of delicate ridges produced by the glacier’s front as it bobbed daily with the tides, revealing a recent period of rapid retreat.New high-resolution seafloor imagery shows a series of delicate ridges produced by the glacier’s front as it bobbed daily with the tides, revealing a recent period of rapid retreat.

Satellite photo of a massive ice shelf with a couple of large cracks
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Melting Below the Pine Island Ice Shelf Minds the Gap

Sarah Derouin, Science Writer by Sarah Derouin 3 October 20223 October 2022

New research shows that increased calving from West Antarctica’s Pine Island Ice Shelf will likely drive increased circulation of warm water—and melting—below the ice.

Illustration of wildfire and wetland forest during the end-Permian extinction interval.
Posted inNews

A Spike in Wildfires Contributed to the End-Permian Extinction

by Jackie Rocheleau 2 August 20225 June 2023

An upward trend in fossilized charcoal indicates that wildfires may have contributed to extinctions during the Great Dying.

Icebreaker at work near glacier.
Posted inNews

Seashells and Penguin Bones Reveal Thwaites Glacier’s Quiet Past

Javier Barbuzano, Science Writer by Javier Barbuzano 26 July 202226 July 2022

Antarctica’s Thwaites and Pine Island Glaciers are melting faster than they have in the past 5,500 years, new evidence shows. Against expectations, their pasts have been remarkably stable.

Allen Foster at the South Pole Telescope in summer 2019–2020
Posted inFeatures

Allen Foster: Greasing Telescope Gears During a 7-Month-Long Night

by Santiago Flórez 25 July 202222 December 2022

While overwintering in Antarctica, Foster maintains the South Pole Telescope facilities.

A snow-covered mountain summit contains a smoking crater.
Posted inNews

Unlocking the Magmatic Secrets of Antarctica’s Mount Erebus

Jenessa Duncombe, Staff Writer by Jenessa Duncombe 22 June 202222 June 2022

Unprecedented images of Mount Erebus’s inner workings show the unique trappings of a CO2-rich rift volcano.

A small red airplane sits atop a vast snowfield, with scientific instruments in the foreground and two individuals looking on in the background.
Posted inFeatures

Circling Antarctica to Unveil the Bed Below Its Icy Edge

by Kenichi Matsuoka, René Forsberg, Fausto Ferraccioli, Geir Moholdt and Mathieu Morlighem 15 June 202221 May 2024

An international initiative aims to collect a comprehensive airborne data set from the Antarctic Ice Sheet margin to better estimate ice discharge and sea level contributions today and in the future.

A magnetotelluric station on Whillans Ice Stream
Posted inNews

Massive Groundwater Systems Lie Beneath Antarctic Ice

by Robin Donovan 13 June 202219 July 2022

Scientists are updating ice stream models to understand the ways in which deep groundwater systems impact ice flow.

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