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Ross Ice Shelf

The Ross Ice Shelf is the largest ice shelf of Antarctica (as of 2013, an area of roughly 500,809 square kilometres (193,363 sq mi)[1] and about 800 kilometres (500 mi) across: about the size of France).[2] It is several hundred metres thick. The nearly vertical ice front to the open sea is more than 600 kilometres (370 mi) long, and between 15 and 50 metres (50 and 160 ft) high above the water surface.[3] Ninety percent of the floating ice, however, is below the water surface.

Ross Ice Shelf situated between Marie Byrd Land and Victoria Land

Most of Ross Ice Shelf is in the Ross Dependency claimed by New Zealand. It floats in, and covers, a large southern portion of the Ross Sea and the entire Roosevelt Island located in the east of the Ross Sea.

The ice shelf is named after Sir James Clark Ross, who discovered it on 28 January 1841. It was originally called "The Barrier", with various adjectives including "Great Ice Barrier", as it prevented sailing further south. Ross mapped the ice front eastward to 160° W. In 1947, the U.S. Board on Geographic Names applied the name "Ross Shelf Ice" to this feature and published it in the original U.S. Antarctic Gazetteer. In January 1953, the name was changed to "Ross Ice Shelf"; that name was published in 1956.[4][5]

Exploration

 
Crevasse, Ross Ice Shelf in 2001
 
"The mystic Barrier" at Bay of Whales, near where Amundsen first encountered it.
Note humans for size comparison (dark spots next to the large chunk of sea ice at left image border). RV Nathaniel B. Palmer is in the distance.

On 5 January 1841, the British Admiralty's Ross expedition in the Erebus and the Terror, three-masted ships with specially strengthened wooden hulls, was going through the pack ice of the Pacific near Antarctica in an attempt to determine the position of the South Magnetic Pole. Four days later, they found their way into open water and were hoping that they would have a clear passage to their destination. But on 11 January, the men were faced with an enormous mass of ice.

Sir James Clark Ross, the expedition's commander, remarked: "It was an obstruction of such character as to leave no doubt upon my mind as to our future proceedings, for we might with equal chance of success try to sail through the cliffs of Dover". Ross, who in 1831 had located the North Magnetic Pole, spent the next two years vainly searching for a sea passage to the South Pole; later, his name was given to the ice shelf and the sea surrounding it. Two volcanoes in the region were named by Ross for his vessels.[6]

For later Antarctic explorers seeking to reach the South Pole, the Ross Ice Shelf became a starting area. In a first exploration of the area by the Discovery Expedition in 1901–1904, Robert Falcon Scott made a significant study of the shelf and its surroundings from his expedition's base on Ross Island. By measurement of calved ice bergs and their buoyancy, he estimated the ice sheet to be on average 274 meters thick; the undisturbed morphology of the ice sheet and its inverted temperature profile led him to conclude it was floating on water; and measurements in 1902–1903 showed it had advanced 555 meters northwards in 13.5 months.[7] The findings were presented at a lecture entitled "Universitas Antarctica!" given 7 June 1911 and were published in the account of Scott's second expedition (the Terra Nova Expedition of 1910–1913).[8]

Ernest Shackleton's southern party (Shackleton, Adams, Marshal, Wild) of the 1908 Nimrod expedition were the first humans to cross the Ice Shelf during its failed attempt to reach the South Pole. Both Roald Amundsen and Scott crossed the shelf to reach the Pole in 1911. Amundsen wrote: "Along its outer edge the Barrier shows an even, flat surface; but here, inside the bay, the conditions were entirely different. Even from the deck of the Fram we were able to observe great disturbances of the surface in every direction; huge ridges with hollows between them extended on all sides. The greatest elevation lay to the south in the form of a lofty, arched ridge, which we took to be about 500 feet [150 m] high on the horizon. But it might be assumed that this ridge continued to rise beyond the range of vision".

The next day, the party made its first steps on the Barrier. "After half an hour's march we were already at the first important point—the connection between the sea-ice and the Barrier. This connection had always haunted our brains. What would it be like? A high, perpendicular face of ice, up which we should have to haul our things laboriously with the help of tackles? Or a great and dangerous fissure, which we should not be able to cross without going a long way round? We naturally expected something of the sort. This mighty and terrible monster would, of course, offer resistance in some form or other," he wrote.

"The mystic Barrier! All accounts without exception, from the days of Ross to the present time, had spoken of this remarkable natural formation with apprehensive awe. It was as though one could always read between the lines the same sentence: 'Hush, be quiet! the mystic Barrier!'

"One, two, three, and a little jump, and the Barrier was surmounted!"[9]

Composition and movement

 
Glacier-ice shelf interactions

Ice shelves are thick plates of ice, formed continuously by glaciers, that float atop an ocean. The shelves act as "brakes" for the glaciers. These shelves serve another important purpose—"they moderate the amount of melting that occurs on the glaciers' surfaces. Once their ice shelves are removed, the glaciers increase in speed due to meltwater percolation and/or a reduction of braking forces, and they may begin to dump more ice into the ocean than they gather as snow in their catchments. Glacier ice speed increases are already observed in Peninsula areas where ice shelves disintegrated in prior years."[10]

 
Ross Ice Shelf edge in 1997
 
  Ross ice shelf in red, other ice shelves in different colors (Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf in blue for example)
 
Main drill site for the New Zealand 2017 hot water drill camp on the Ross Ice Shelf

The Ross Ice Shelf is one of many such shelves. It reaches into Antarctica from the north, and covers an area of about 520,000 km2 (200,000 sq mi), nearly the size of France.[2][3] The ice mass is about 800 km (500 mi) wide and 970 km (600 mi) long. In some places, namely its southern areas, the ice shelf can be almost 750 m (2,450 ft) thick. The Ross Ice Shelf pushes out into the sea at between 1.5 and 3 m (5 and 10 ft) a day. Other glaciers gradually add bulk to it. At the same time, the freezing of seawater below the ice mass increases the thickness of the ice from 40 to 50 cm (16 to 20 in)[when?]. Sometimes, fissures and cracks may cause part of the shelf to break off; the largest known is about 31,000 km2 (12,000 sq mi), that is, slightly larger than Belgium.[11] Iceberg B-15, the world's largest recorded iceberg, was calved from the Ross Ice Shelf during March 2000.

Scientists have long been intrigued by the shelf and its composition. Many scientific teams researching the Antarctic have made camps on or adjacent to the Ross Ice Shelf. This includes McMurdo Station.[12] One major effort was a series of studies conducted in 1957 and 1958, which were continued during the 1960–61 season. The efforts involved an international team of scientists. Some parties explored the glaciers and others the valleys on the ice shelf.[13]

From 1967 to 1972 the Scott Polar Research Institute reported extensive observations using radio echo sounding. The technique allowed measurements to be taken from the air; allowing a criss cross track of 35,000 km to be covered; compared with a 3,000 km track from previous seismic sounding on the ground.[14] More detailed surveys were executed between 1973 and 1978.

A significant scientific endeavor called the Ross Ice Shelf Project was launched with a plan of drilling into the shelf to sample the biomass in the area and make other determinations about the shelf and its relationship to the sea floor. This is believed to be the first oceanographic ice shelf borehole. The project included surface glaciological observations as well as drilling, and the glaciological portion started during the planning phase of the drilling.[15] The drilling portion of the project was to have begun during 1974, but the actual drilling was delayed until 1976. Finally, in 1977, the scientists were able to drill successfully through the ice, making a hole that could be sampled every few days for three weeks. The team was able to map the sea floor, study the tides, and assess the fish and various other forms of life in the waters. The team also examined the oceanographic and geological conditions as well as the temperature of the ice. They estimated that the base of the shelf was −2.16° Celsius (27.3 °F). They also made other calculations about the fluctuations of the temperatures.[12]

The results of these various projects were published in a series of reports in the 2 February 1979 issue of Science.[12]

During the 1980s, a network of weather stations was installed to record temperatures on the shelf and throughout the more remote parts of the continent.[16]

University of Colorado's National Snow and Ice Data Center has been studying ice shelves and, in 2002, announced that, based on several breakups of ice shelves, including Larsen B, has begun to reassess their stability. Their scientists stated that the temperature of the warmest portion of the shelf is "only a few degrees too cool in summer presently to undergo the same kind of retreat process. The Ross Ice Shelf is the main outlet for several major glaciers draining the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, which contains the equivalent of 5 m of sea level rise in its above-sea-level ice." The report added that observations of "iceberg calving" on the Ross Ice Shelf are, in their opinion, unrelated to its stability.[10]

Scientific exploration continues to uncover interesting information and the analyses have resulted in some interesting theories being posited and publicized. One such opinion, given in 2006 based on a geological survey, suggested that the ice shelf had collapsed previously, perhaps suddenly, which could well happen again.[17]

A science team from New Zealand installed a camp in the centre of the shelf in late 2017. The expedition was led by glaciologist Christina Hulbe[18] and brought together oceanographers, glaciologists, biologists and sedimentologists to examine the ice, ocean and sediment in the central shelf region. One of the key findings was that the ice in the region was re-freezing.[19] This re-freezing and growth of an ice shelf is not uncommon but the Ross Ice Shelf situation appeared to be very variable as there was no evidence of long-term freezing.[20] A recent study attribute this variability in-part to tidal mixing.[21]

A second New Zealand expedition in 2019 traveled to the grounding line region of the Kamb Ice Stream. The hot water drill borehole at this site penetrated through over 500 m of snow and ice to an ocean cavity only 30 m deep at this location.[22] As well as sampling the ocean and sediment, it was the first deployment beneath the Ross Ice Shelf of the Remotely operated underwater vehicle Icefin developed at Georgia Tech, a vehicle designed around parameters suitable for exploration of the liquid cavities of places like Europa.[23] The same New Zealand team returned to another site along the Kamb coast in December 2021, this time drilling through an under-ice river that proved to be essentially oceanic. The team were able to melt through the ice to discover the 250 m deep river had formed a relatively narrow channel beneath the ice. They also recorded evidence of the tsunami generated by the 2022 Hunga Tonga–Hunga Ha'apai eruption and tsunami.[24]

See also

References

  1. ^ Rignot, E.; Jacobs, S.; Mouginot, J.; Scheuchl, B. (19 July 2013). "Ice-Shelf Melting Around Antarctica". Science. 341 (6143): 266–270. Bibcode:2013Sci...341..266R. doi:10.1126/science.1235798. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 23765278. S2CID 206548095.
  2. ^ a b "Antarctic Hazards". British Antarctic Survey. Retrieved 20 April 2019.
  3. ^ a b Scheffel, Richard L.; Wernet, Susan J., eds. (1980). Natural Wonders of the World. United States of America: Reader's Digest Association, Inc. p. 325. ISBN 978-0-89577-087-5.
  4. ^ 1) [Bertrand, Kenneth John, et al, ed.] The Geographical Names of Antarctica. Special Publication No. 86. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Board on Geographical Names, May 1947. 2) [Bertrand, Kenneth J. and Fred G. Alberts]. Gazetteer No. 14. Geographic Names of Antarctica. Washington: US Government Printing Office, January 1956.
  5. ^ "Ross Ice Shelf Case Brief". US Board on Geographic Names. Retrieved 1 May 2016.
  6. ^ "About – British Antarctic Survey". bas.ac.uk. Retrieved 20 April 2019.
  7. ^ R.F. Scott (1905) The Voyage of the Discovery. Vol II, pp. 411–421 [411] Smith, Elder and Co, London
  8. ^ Scott, Robert and Leonard Huxley. Scott's Last Expedition in Two Volumes: Vol. II. New York: Dodd, Mead and Company, 1913.
  9. ^ Amundsen, Roald. The South Pole An Account of the Norwegian Antarctic Expedition in the 'Fram,' 1910–1912. Retrieved 1 July 2015. (Translated from the Norwegian by A. G. Chater)
  10. ^ a b "Larsen B Ice Shelf Collapses in Antarctica – National Snow and Ice Data Center". nsidc.org. Retrieved 20 April 2019.
  11. ^ . usatoday30.usatoday.com. Archived from the original on 28 September 2019. Retrieved 20 April 2019.
  12. ^ a b c Clough, John W.; Hansen, B. Lyle (2 February 1979), "The Ross Ice Shelf Project", Science, 203 (4379): 433–455, Bibcode:1979Sci...203..433C, doi:10.1126/science.203.4379.433, PMID 17734133, S2CID 28745122.
  13. ^ Swithinbank, Charles (March 1964), "To the Valley Glaciers That Feed the Ross Ice Shelf", The Geographical Journal, 130 (1): 32–48, doi:10.2307/1794263, JSTOR 1794263
  14. ^ Nature-Times News Service; Science report Glaciology: Ross ice shelf flow; The Times; 28 January 1975; p. 12
  15. ^ Thomas, R.H.; MacAyeal, D.R.; Eilers, D.H.; Gaylord, D.R. (1990), "Glaciological studies on the Ross Ice Shelf, Antarctica, 1973–1978", in Bentley, C. R.; Hayes, D.E. (eds.), The Ross Ice Shelf: Glaciology and Geophysics, Ant. Res. Ser., vol. 42, Washington D.C.: AGU, pp. 21–53, doi:10.1029/AR042p0021, ISBN 978-0-87590-195-4, ISSN 0066-4634.
  16. ^ Patel, Samir S. (5 April 2006). "A Sinking Feeling". Nature. 440 (7085): 734–736. doi:10.1038/440734a. PMID 16598226. S2CID 1174790.
  17. ^ "Massive ice shelf 'may collapse without warning'". The New Zealand Herald. 29 November 2006.
  18. ^ jamie.morton@nzherald.co.nz @Jamienzherald, Jamie Morton Science Reporter, NZ Herald (25 June 2017). "NZ scientists in ambitious project to probe Spain-sized ice shelf". Retrieved 20 April 2019 – via nzherald.co.nz.
  19. ^ "Deep Bore Into Antarctica Finds Freezing Ice, Not Melting as Expected". National Geographic News. 16 February 2018. Retrieved 20 April 2019.
  20. ^ Hulbe, Christina; Stevens, Craig. "Climate scientists explore hidden ocean beneath Antarctica's largest ice shelf". The Conversation. Retrieved 20 April 2019.
  21. ^ Stevens, C., Hulbe, C., Brewer, M., Stewart, C., Robinson, N., Ohneiser, C. and Jendersie, S., 2020. Ocean mixing and heat transport processes observed under the Ross Ice Shelf control its basal melting. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 117(29), pp. 16799–16804. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1910760117
  22. ^ "Antarctic Update". Radio New Zealand. 3 February 2020.
  23. ^ Schmidt, B.E., Lawrence, J.D., Meister, M.R., Dicheck, D.J.G., Hurwitz, B.C., Spears, A., Mullen, A.D., Washam, P.M., Bryson, F.E., Quartini, E. and Ramey, C.D., 2020. Europa in Our Backyard: Under Ice Robotic Exploration of Antarctic Analogs. LPI, (2326), p. 1065.
  24. ^ Horgan, H. and Stevens C. (2022) Exploring Antarctica's hidden under-ice rivers and their role in future sea-level rise, The Conversation, https://theconversation.com/exploring-antarcticas-hidden-under-ice-rivers-and-their-role-in-future-sea-level-rise-176456

External links

  • Polar Discovery: Ross Sea Penguins and Lava Flows
  • Some pictures of the Ross
  • Massive ice shelf 'may collapse without warning'
  • Photograph of Ross Ice Shelf edge

ross, shelf, largest, shelf, antarctica, 2013, update, area, roughly, square, kilometres, about, kilometres, across, about, size, france, several, hundred, metres, thick, nearly, vertical, front, open, more, than, kilometres, long, between, metres, high, above. The Ross Ice Shelf is the largest ice shelf of Antarctica as of 2013 update an area of roughly 500 809 square kilometres 193 363 sq mi 1 and about 800 kilometres 500 mi across about the size of France 2 It is several hundred metres thick The nearly vertical ice front to the open sea is more than 600 kilometres 370 mi long and between 15 and 50 metres 50 and 160 ft high above the water surface 3 Ninety percent of the floating ice however is below the water surface Ross Ice Shelf situated between Marie Byrd Land and Victoria Land Most of Ross Ice Shelf is in the Ross Dependency claimed by New Zealand It floats in and covers a large southern portion of the Ross Sea and the entire Roosevelt Island located in the east of the Ross Sea The ice shelf is named after Sir James Clark Ross who discovered it on 28 January 1841 It was originally called The Barrier with various adjectives including Great Ice Barrier as it prevented sailing further south Ross mapped the ice front eastward to 160 W In 1947 the U S Board on Geographic Names applied the name Ross Shelf Ice to this feature and published it in the original U S Antarctic Gazetteer In January 1953 the name was changed to Ross Ice Shelf that name was published in 1956 4 5 Contents 1 Exploration 2 Composition and movement 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksExploration Edit Crevasse Ross Ice Shelf in 2001 The mystic Barrier at Bay of Whales near where Amundsen first encountered it Note humans for size comparison dark spots next to the large chunk of sea ice at left image border RV Nathaniel B Palmer is in the distance On 5 January 1841 the British Admiralty s Ross expedition in the Erebus and the Terror three masted ships with specially strengthened wooden hulls was going through the pack ice of the Pacific near Antarctica in an attempt to determine the position of the South Magnetic Pole Four days later they found their way into open water and were hoping that they would have a clear passage to their destination But on 11 January the men were faced with an enormous mass of ice Sir James Clark Ross the expedition s commander remarked It was an obstruction of such character as to leave no doubt upon my mind as to our future proceedings for we might with equal chance of success try to sail through the cliffs of Dover Ross who in 1831 had located the North Magnetic Pole spent the next two years vainly searching for a sea passage to the South Pole later his name was given to the ice shelf and the sea surrounding it Two volcanoes in the region were named by Ross for his vessels 6 For later Antarctic explorers seeking to reach the South Pole the Ross Ice Shelf became a starting area In a first exploration of the area by the Discovery Expedition in 1901 1904 Robert Falcon Scott made a significant study of the shelf and its surroundings from his expedition s base on Ross Island By measurement of calved ice bergs and their buoyancy he estimated the ice sheet to be on average 274 meters thick the undisturbed morphology of the ice sheet and its inverted temperature profile led him to conclude it was floating on water and measurements in 1902 1903 showed it had advanced 555 meters northwards in 13 5 months 7 The findings were presented at a lecture entitled Universitas Antarctica given 7 June 1911 and were published in the account of Scott s second expedition the Terra Nova Expedition of 1910 1913 8 Ernest Shackleton s southern party Shackleton Adams Marshal Wild of the 1908 Nimrod expedition were the first humans to cross the Ice Shelf during its failed attempt to reach the South Pole Both Roald Amundsen and Scott crossed the shelf to reach the Pole in 1911 Amundsen wrote Along its outer edge the Barrier shows an even flat surface but here inside the bay the conditions were entirely different Even from the deck of the Fram we were able to observe great disturbances of the surface in every direction huge ridges with hollows between them extended on all sides The greatest elevation lay to the south in the form of a lofty arched ridge which we took to be about 500 feet 150 m high on the horizon But it might be assumed that this ridge continued to rise beyond the range of vision The next day the party made its first steps on the Barrier After half an hour s march we were already at the first important point the connection between the sea ice and the Barrier This connection had always haunted our brains What would it be like A high perpendicular face of ice up which we should have to haul our things laboriously with the help of tackles Or a great and dangerous fissure which we should not be able to cross without going a long way round We naturally expected something of the sort This mighty and terrible monster would of course offer resistance in some form or other he wrote The mystic Barrier All accounts without exception from the days of Ross to the present time had spoken of this remarkable natural formation with apprehensive awe It was as though one could always read between the lines the same sentence Hush be quiet the mystic Barrier One two three and a little jump and the Barrier was surmounted 9 Composition and movement Edit Glacier ice shelf interactions Ice shelves are thick plates of ice formed continuously by glaciers that float atop an ocean The shelves act as brakes for the glaciers These shelves serve another important purpose they moderate the amount of melting that occurs on the glaciers surfaces Once their ice shelves are removed the glaciers increase in speed due to meltwater percolation and or a reduction of braking forces and they may begin to dump more ice into the ocean than they gather as snow in their catchments Glacier ice speed increases are already observed in Peninsula areas where ice shelves disintegrated in prior years 10 Ross Ice Shelf edge in 1997 Ross ice shelf in red other ice shelves in different colors Filchner Ronne Ice Shelf in blue for example Main drill site for the New Zealand 2017 hot water drill camp on the Ross Ice Shelf The Ross Ice Shelf is one of many such shelves It reaches into Antarctica from the north and covers an area of about 520 000 km2 200 000 sq mi nearly the size of France 2 3 The ice mass is about 800 km 500 mi wide and 970 km 600 mi long In some places namely its southern areas the ice shelf can be almost 750 m 2 450 ft thick The Ross Ice Shelf pushes out into the sea at between 1 5 and 3 m 5 and 10 ft a day Other glaciers gradually add bulk to it At the same time the freezing of seawater below the ice mass increases the thickness of the ice from 40 to 50 cm 16 to 20 in when Sometimes fissures and cracks may cause part of the shelf to break off the largest known is about 31 000 km2 12 000 sq mi that is slightly larger than Belgium 11 Iceberg B 15 the world s largest recorded iceberg was calved from the Ross Ice Shelf during March 2000 Scientists have long been intrigued by the shelf and its composition Many scientific teams researching the Antarctic have made camps on or adjacent to the Ross Ice Shelf This includes McMurdo Station 12 One major effort was a series of studies conducted in 1957 and 1958 which were continued during the 1960 61 season The efforts involved an international team of scientists Some parties explored the glaciers and others the valleys on the ice shelf 13 From 1967 to 1972 the Scott Polar Research Institute reported extensive observations using radio echo sounding The technique allowed measurements to be taken from the air allowing a criss cross track of 35 000 km to be covered compared with a 3 000 km track from previous seismic sounding on the ground 14 More detailed surveys were executed between 1973 and 1978 A significant scientific endeavor called the Ross Ice Shelf Project was launched with a plan of drilling into the shelf to sample the biomass in the area and make other determinations about the shelf and its relationship to the sea floor This is believed to be the first oceanographic ice shelf borehole The project included surface glaciological observations as well as drilling and the glaciological portion started during the planning phase of the drilling 15 The drilling portion of the project was to have begun during 1974 but the actual drilling was delayed until 1976 Finally in 1977 the scientists were able to drill successfully through the ice making a hole that could be sampled every few days for three weeks The team was able to map the sea floor study the tides and assess the fish and various other forms of life in the waters The team also examined the oceanographic and geological conditions as well as the temperature of the ice They estimated that the base of the shelf was 2 16 Celsius 27 3 F They also made other calculations about the fluctuations of the temperatures 12 The results of these various projects were published in a series of reports in the 2 February 1979 issue of Science 12 During the 1980s a network of weather stations was installed to record temperatures on the shelf and throughout the more remote parts of the continent 16 University of Colorado s National Snow and Ice Data Center has been studying ice shelves and in 2002 announced that based on several breakups of ice shelves including Larsen B has begun to reassess their stability Their scientists stated that the temperature of the warmest portion of the shelf is only a few degrees too cool in summer presently to undergo the same kind of retreat process The Ross Ice Shelf is the main outlet for several major glaciers draining the West Antarctic Ice Sheet which contains the equivalent of 5 m of sea level rise in its above sea level ice The report added that observations of iceberg calving on the Ross Ice Shelf are in their opinion unrelated to its stability 10 Scientific exploration continues to uncover interesting information and the analyses have resulted in some interesting theories being posited and publicized One such opinion given in 2006 based on a geological survey suggested that the ice shelf had collapsed previously perhaps suddenly which could well happen again 17 A science team from New Zealand installed a camp in the centre of the shelf in late 2017 The expedition was led by glaciologist Christina Hulbe 18 and brought together oceanographers glaciologists biologists and sedimentologists to examine the ice ocean and sediment in the central shelf region One of the key findings was that the ice in the region was re freezing 19 This re freezing and growth of an ice shelf is not uncommon but the Ross Ice Shelf situation appeared to be very variable as there was no evidence of long term freezing 20 A recent study attribute this variability in part to tidal mixing 21 A second New Zealand expedition in 2019 traveled to the grounding line region of the Kamb Ice Stream The hot water drill borehole at this site penetrated through over 500 m of snow and ice to an ocean cavity only 30 m deep at this location 22 As well as sampling the ocean and sediment it was the first deployment beneath the Ross Ice Shelf of the Remotely operated underwater vehicle Icefin developed at Georgia Tech a vehicle designed around parameters suitable for exploration of the liquid cavities of places like Europa 23 The same New Zealand team returned to another site along the Kamb coast in December 2021 this time drilling through an under ice river that proved to be essentially oceanic The team were able to melt through the ice to discover the 250 m deep river had formed a relatively narrow channel beneath the ice They also recorded evidence of the tsunami generated by the 2022 Hunga Tonga Hunga Ha apai eruption and tsunami 24 See also EditCape Huinga Eady Ice Piedmont Howard Williams Point Iceberg B 17B List of Antarctic ice shelves Nimrod Expedition Retreat of glaciers since 1850 Ross Embayment Ross Gyre Steershead Crevasses West Antarctic Rift SystemReferences Edit Rignot E Jacobs S Mouginot J Scheuchl B 19 July 2013 Ice Shelf Melting Around Antarctica Science 341 6143 266 270 Bibcode 2013Sci 341 266R doi 10 1126 science 1235798 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 23765278 S2CID 206548095 a b Antarctic Hazards British Antarctic Survey Retrieved 20 April 2019 a b Scheffel Richard L Wernet Susan J eds 1980 Natural Wonders of the World United States of America Reader s Digest Association Inc p 325 ISBN 978 0 89577 087 5 1 Bertrand Kenneth John et al ed The Geographical Names of Antarctica Special Publication No 86 Washington D C U S Board on Geographical Names May 1947 2 Bertrand Kenneth J and Fred G Alberts Gazetteer No 14 Geographic Names of Antarctica Washington US Government Printing Office January 1956 Ross Ice Shelf Case Brief US Board on Geographic Names Retrieved 1 May 2016 About British Antarctic Survey bas ac uk Retrieved 20 April 2019 R F Scott 1905 The Voyage of the Discovery Vol II pp 411 421 411 Smith Elder and Co London Scott Robert and Leonard Huxley Scott s Last Expedition in Two Volumes Vol II New York Dodd Mead and Company 1913 Amundsen Roald The South Pole An Account of the Norwegian Antarctic Expedition in the Fram 1910 1912 Retrieved 1 July 2015 Translated from the Norwegian by A G Chater a b Larsen B Ice Shelf Collapses in Antarctica National Snow and Ice Data Center nsidc org Retrieved 20 April 2019 Antarctica shed a 208 mile long berg in 1956 usatoday30 usatoday com Archived from the original on 28 September 2019 Retrieved 20 April 2019 a b c Clough John W Hansen B Lyle 2 February 1979 The Ross Ice Shelf Project Science 203 4379 433 455 Bibcode 1979Sci 203 433C doi 10 1126 science 203 4379 433 PMID 17734133 S2CID 28745122 Swithinbank Charles March 1964 To the Valley Glaciers That Feed the Ross Ice Shelf The Geographical Journal 130 1 32 48 doi 10 2307 1794263 JSTOR 1794263 Nature Times News Service Science report Glaciology Ross ice shelf flow The Times 28 January 1975 p 12 Thomas R H MacAyeal D R Eilers D H Gaylord D R 1990 Glaciological studies on the Ross Ice Shelf Antarctica 1973 1978 in Bentley C R Hayes D E eds The Ross Ice Shelf Glaciology and Geophysics Ant Res Ser vol 42 Washington D C AGU pp 21 53 doi 10 1029 AR042p0021 ISBN 978 0 87590 195 4 ISSN 0066 4634 Patel Samir S 5 April 2006 A Sinking Feeling Nature 440 7085 734 736 doi 10 1038 440734a PMID 16598226 S2CID 1174790 Massive ice shelf may collapse without warning The New Zealand Herald 29 November 2006 jamie morton nzherald co nz Jamienzherald Jamie Morton Science Reporter NZ Herald 25 June 2017 NZ scientists in ambitious project to probe Spain sized ice shelf Retrieved 20 April 2019 via nzherald co nz Deep Bore Into Antarctica Finds Freezing Ice Not Melting as Expected National Geographic News 16 February 2018 Retrieved 20 April 2019 Hulbe Christina Stevens Craig Climate scientists explore hidden ocean beneath Antarctica s largest ice shelf The Conversation Retrieved 20 April 2019 Stevens C Hulbe C Brewer M Stewart C Robinson N Ohneiser C and Jendersie S 2020 Ocean mixing and heat transport processes observed under the Ross Ice Shelf control its basal melting Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 117 29 pp 16799 16804 https doi org 10 1073 pnas 1910760117 Antarctic Update Radio New Zealand 3 February 2020 Schmidt B E Lawrence J D Meister M R Dicheck D J G Hurwitz B C Spears A Mullen A D Washam P M Bryson F E Quartini E and Ramey C D 2020 Europa in Our Backyard Under Ice Robotic Exploration of Antarctic Analogs LPI 2326 p 1065 Horgan H and Stevens C 2022 Exploring Antarctica s hidden under ice rivers and their role in future sea level rise The Conversation https theconversation com exploring antarcticas hidden under ice rivers and their role in future sea level rise 176456External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ross Ice Shelf Polar Discovery Ross Sea Penguins and Lava Flows Some pictures of the Ross Massive ice shelf may collapse without warning Photograph of Ross Ice Shelf edgePortal Geography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ross Ice Shelf amp oldid 1144042826, wikipedia, wiki, 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