Showing posts with label Antarctica. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Antarctica. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 17, 2021

Mystery Lifeforms Discovered Beneath Antarctica

Mystery Lifeforms Discovered Beneath Antarctica

[...]

     ... when scientists drilled through an Antarctic ice shelf far from light or warmth, they found a seafloor boulder that's home to several species we may have never seen before.

A few of the organisms have been seen in similar locations, but
By Michelle Starr
www.sciencealert.com
2-15-21
this discovery marks the first time stationary creatures that live their lives attached to one place, such as sponges, have been found in this hostile environment.

Saturday, December 01, 2018

Anomalous, Giant 'Hotspot' Discovered Under Antarctica

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Anomalous, Giant 'Hotspot' Discovered Under Antarctica

     There's something unusual – and very, very hot – going on beneath the ice sheets of Antarctica.

A new study has shown that the Antarctic Ice Sheet at the
By Tom Hale
www.iflscience.com
11-15-18
South Pole has a giant “hotspot” – triple the size of London – under its bedrock.

Friday, November 13, 2015

Huge Ozone Hole Over Antarctica Is Back!

Ozone Hole Over Antarctica Nears Record-Breaking Size Again

By Elizabeth Newbern
www.livescience.com
11-11-15

      The hole in the ozone layer over Antarctica is nearing record-breaking size again, scientists say. In fact, new observations show that the infamous "ozone hole" is currently larger than the entire continent of North America.

Researchers at the German Aerospace Center are using Earth-observing satellites to monitor the protective ozone layer and recently reported that a large, nearly circular hole over Antarctica extends over an area measuring 26 million square km (10 million square miles). [...]

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Crashed UFO Hidden in Antarctic Ice?

Crashed UFO Hidden in Antarctic Ice

By Jon Austin
ww.express.co.uk
6-15-15

     A UFO hunter claims to have found the crash site and wreckage of an alien craft that he believes may have been downed in the Antarctic.

Valentin Degterev from the city of Nizhny Tagil in central Russia, says he found the UGO (unidentified ground object) online using Google Earth.

Mr Degterev, who says he is a "researcher of the unknown" posted the images and co-ordinates online before they went viral.

He is convinced the huge unidentified object must have been caused by a UFO crash at least three years ago with the "flying saucer" still half buried there in the ice-land wastes of Antarctica.

He wrote on social media: "In among the endless ice desert, it is the most genuine UFO in its most classic shape."

The satellite image used by Google Earth was taken on February 15 2012, but has just been made more widely available.

He said: "I think there is very large disc-shaped flying machine amongst the frozen ice." . . .

Friday, November 22, 2013

Extraterrestrial Particles Found at South Pole

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By Tanya Lewis
space.com
11-21-13


      For decades, scientists have been searching for ghostly neutrino particles from outer space, and now they have finally found them.

Using the IceCube Neutrino Observatory in Antarctica, researchers found the first evidence of neutrinos from outside the solar system since 1987. The findings open the door for a new era of astronomy that could reveal secrets of the strangest phenomena in the universe, scientists say.

"It is a major breakthrough," said Uli Katz, a particle physicist at University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, in Germany, who was not involved with the research. "I think it is one of the absolute major discoveries in astro-particle physics," Katz told SPACE.com. . . .

Thursday, September 12, 2013

'New Life' Found Beneath The Ice?

New Life Found Beneath The Ice?

Life found in the sediments of an Antarctic subglacial lake for the first time

By British Antarctic Survey
9-10-13

     Evidence of diverse life forms dating back nearly a hundred thousand years has been found in sub-glacial lake sediments by a group of British scientists.

The possibility that extreme life forms might exist in the cold and dark lakes hidden kilometres beneath the Antarctic ice sheet has fascinated scientists for decades.

However, direct sampling of these lakes in the interior of Antarctica continues to present major technological challenges. Recognising this, scientists from the British Antarctic Survey (BAS), and the Universities of Northumbria and Edinburgh have been searching around the retreating margins of the ice sheet for subglacial lakes that are becoming exposed for the first time since they were buried more than 100,000 years ago.

This is because parts of the ice sheet are melting and retreating at unprecedented rates as the temperature rises at the poles.

The group targeted Lake Hodgson on the Antarctic Peninsula which was covered by more than 400 m of ice at the end of the last Ice Age, but is now considered to be an emerging subglacial lake, with a thin covering of just 3–4 metres of ice.

Drilling through the ice they used clean coring techniques to delve into the sediments at the bottom of the lake which is 93 metres deep and approximately 1.5 km long by 1.5 km wide.

The lake was thought to be a harsh environment for any form of life but the layers of mud at the bottom of the lake represent a time capsule storing the DNA of the microbes which have lived there throughout the millennia. The top few centimetres of the core contained current and recent organisms which inhabit the lake but once the core reached 3.2 m deep the microbes found most likely date back nearly 100,000 years.

Lead author David Pearce, who was at BAS and is now at the University of Northumbria, says,

“What was surprising was the high biomass and diversity we found. This is the first time microbes have been identified living in the sediments of a subglacial Antarctic lake and indicates that life can exist and potentially thrive in environments we would consider too extreme.

“The fact these organisms have survived in such a unique environment could mean they have developed in unique ways which could lead to exciting discoveries for us. This is the early stage and we now need to do more work to further investigate these life forms.”

Some of the life discovered was in the form of Fossil DNA showing that many different types of bacteria live there, including a range of extremophiles which are species adapted to the most extreme environments. These use a variety of chemical methods to sustain life both with and without oxygen.

One DNA sequence was related to the most ancient organisms known on Earth and parts of the DNA in twenty three percent has not been previously described. Many of the species are likely to be new to science making clean exploration of the remote lakes isolated under the deeper parts of the ice sheet even more pressing.

Scientists believe organisms living in subglacial lakes could hold clues for how life might survive on other planets.

Late last year a British expedition to drill into Lake Ellsworth was called off after technical difficulties. A US expedition sampled a subglacial environment near the edge of the ice sheet but has yet to report its findings, and a Russian led project has sampled ice near the surface of a subglacial lake and has reported finding signs of life.

The paper, Preliminary Analysis of Life within a Former Subglacial Lake Sediment in Antarctica has been published online in the Journal ‘Diversity’ as part of a special issue on Microbial Ecology and Diversity.

Funding was from the Natural Environment Research Council UK

Monday, January 14, 2013

Russian Researchers Reach Back 20 Million Years & Retrieve First Samples From Sub-Glacial Antarctic Lake


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Lake Vostok (Ice Graphic)

By Rianovosti
1-14-13

     ST. PETERSBURG, January 10 (RIA Novosti) - Russian researchers obtained the first sample of transparent ice from the water of a unique sub-glacial lake in Antarctica during drilling operations on Thursday, Russia's Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute reported.

In February 2012, after decades of drilling, Russian scientists finally managed to penetrate Antarctica’s ice sheet at a depth of some 3.7 kilometers (2.3 miles) to reveal the secrets of Lake Vostok, which had been sealed there for the past 20 million years.

Explorers hope Vostok, which is the largest of Antarctica's buried network of icebound lakes and also one of the largest lakes in the world, could reveal new forms of life and show how life evolved before the ice age.

Scientists have previously examined water samples received when they drilled deep into the lake back in 2012, but they were not sure these were samples of lake water rather than water inside the glacier above the lake. So in order to receive ice right from the lake, researchers drilled into the glacier once again in January 2013.

“The first core of transparent lake ice, 2 meters long, was obtained on January 10 at a depth of 3,406 meters. Inside it was a vertical channel filled with white bubble-rich ice,” the Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute, part of the Federal Service for Hydrometeorology and Environmental Monitoring, said in a statement.

The institute said the composition and origin of the new core are being determined. . . .

Monday, December 24, 2012

West Antarctica Warming Twice As Fast As Previously Believed

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Antarctic Ice Melt

By Alister Doyle
The Huffington Post
12-23-12

OSLO, Dec 23 (Reuters) - West Antarctica is warming almost twice as fast as previously believed, adding to worries of a thaw that would add to sea level rise from San Francisco to Shanghai, a study showed on Sunday.

Annual average temperatures at the Byrd research station in West Antarctica had risen 2.4 degrees Celsius (4.3F) since the 1950s, one of the fastest gains on the planet and three times the global average in a changing climate, it said.

The unexpectedly big increase adds to fears the ice sheet is vulnerable to thawing. West Antarctica holds enough ice to raise world sea levels by at least 3.3 metres (11 feet) if it ever all melted, a process that would take centuries.

"The western part of the ice sheet is experiencing nearly twice as much warming as previously thought," Ohio State University said in a statement of the study led by its geography professor David Bromwich.

The warming "raises further concerns about the future contribution of Antarctica to sea level rise," it said. Higher summer temperatures raised risks of a surface melt of ice and snow even though most of Antarctica is in a year-round deep freeze.

Low-lying nations from Bangladesh to Tuvalu are especially vulnerable to sea level rise, as are coastal cities from London to Buenos Aires. Sea levels have risen by about 20 cms (8 inches) in the past century.

Thursday, December 06, 2012

47 Scientists from 36 Laboratories Determine Staggering Ice-Melt Figures From Greenland and Antarctica | CLIMATE CHANGE NEWS | VIDEO

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Ice Melt illustration 1979-2000 (Edt)

Sheldon Glacier Antartica 11-29-12

By Michael D. Lemonick
Michael D. Lemonick
11-29-12
      The vast ice sheets that cover Greenland and Antarctica have begun melting and sliding into the ocean as heat-trapping greenhouse gases continue to build in the atmosphere. How much and how fast the ice is disappearing, however, has been poorly understood, because the satellites that measure it haven’t always agreed. But a report published Thursday in Science has cleared up much of the uncertainty.

A team of no fewer than 47 scientists from 36 laboratories, looking at data from 10 different satellites, has come up with numbers everyone is on board with: between 1992 and 2011, Greenland has lost an average of 152 billion metric tons of ice per year, while Antarctica has shed 71 billion, contributing 11 millimeters to the rise in sea level over that period — about a fifth of the total (the rest has come from from seawater expanding as it warms and from melting mountain glaciers).

“The new estimates,” lead author Andrew Shepherd, of the University of Leeds, said in a press conference, “are the most reliable to date. They end 20 years of uncertainty.”

The estimates don't change projections about what’s likely to happen for the rest of this century. Scientists’ best estimate is that that the ocean, which has risen an average of 8 inches since 1900, should rise another 3 feet or so by 2100. . . .

Monday, August 13, 2012

UFO NEWS | VIDEO: UFO spotted over Antarctica?


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See Also:

JAL Pilot's UFO Story Surfaces After 20 Years

Huge Meteor Crater Found In Antarctica

Exclusive: No Ice at the North Pole


SHARE YOUR UFO EXPERIENCE

Wednesday, March 02, 2011

Did The 'Seeds of Space' Spawn Life Here on Earth?

Did The 'Seeds of Space' Begin Life Here on Earth?



Meteorites 'could have carried nitrogen to Earth'

By Neil Bowdler
BBC News
2-28-11

A meteorite found in Antarctica could lend weight to the argument that life on Earth might have been kick-started from space, scientists are claiming.

     Chemical analysis of the meteorite shows it to be rich in the gas ammonia.

It contains the element nitrogen, found in the proteins and DNA that form the basis of life as we know it.

Meteorites could have showered the Earth with an attractive mix of components, including a large amount of ammonia”

Professor Sandra Pizzarello Arizona State University

The researchers say meteorites like this could have showered the early Earth, providing the missing ingredients for life.

Details of the study by researchers at Arizona State University and the University of California, Santa Cruz, are published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.