Researchers want to explore life under hundreds of feet of ice

environmentclimate changemarine ecosystemantarcticaresearch expedition
Aerial view of the A68 iceberg, which broke off in July 2017 from the Larsen C ice shelf in the Antarctic Weddell Sea. (c) Ali Rose, BAS

Antarctic expedition to the Larsen C ice shelf and iceberg A68 An international research team led by the Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI) will embark on a nine-week expedition to Antarctica on 9 February 2019 in Punta Arenas (Chile) with the research icebreaker Polarstern to explore a marine ecosystem hitherto hidden under ice shelves. The iceberg called A68, which has almost seven times the area of Berlin, calved in July 2017 from the Antarctic Larsen Ice Shelf. Now researchers are planning to travel to the region to take samples from the seabed. The demolition of the huge iceberg freed an area of about 5,800 square kilometres from the hundreds of meters thick ice layer. Two expeditions had tried in vain to reach the area. The mission is rushing: The ecosystem, probably covered by the ice for several thousand years, could change rapidly with the new light conditions. The AWI-led team will embark on a nine-week Antarctic expedition on 9 February 2019 in Punta Arenas, Chile, with the research icebreaker Polarstern. The use of satellite images supports sea-ice navigation to reach the remote region of the Larsen C ice shelf area east of the Antarctic Peninsula. "The expedition to the Larsen C Ice Shelf is a unique opportunity to conduct interdisciplinary research in this region affected by climate change," says the expedition's scientific director Boris Dorschel. "Larsen-C is really far to the south and even in times of minimal sea ice cover in the Antarctic there is a lot of ice. Getting there at the moment is very important because we hope to gain insight into the recently liberated world ". The scientists are supported by high-resolution satellite data and ice detection with the onboard helicopters of the Polarstern. "The calving of A68 is a unique opportunity to study marine life that is facing dramatic environmental change. A68 is one of the largest icebergs ever recorded and gives us an extraordinary chance to explore a world that we know virtually nothing about, which is normally hidden under hundreds of metres of ice," marine biologist Dr. Huw Griffiths of the British Antarctic Survey (BAS). He leads one of the research projects on biology at the seafloor. "This environment has been without sunlight for thousands of years and is likely to be home to a specially adapted community of animals that can cope with very little food. The break off of this enormous iceberg will have a similar effect to suddenly taking the roof off a cave. For the first time in thousands of years microscopic plants will be able to bloom at the surface, changing the food chain, and allowing different species to colonise and take over," explains Huw Griffiths. The expedition team will study animals, microorganisms, plankton, marine sediments and water samples. A variety of devices are used such as UW video cameras and a sled, which collects small animals on the seabed. The seabed is measured in detail using sonar systems.

Part of the demolition edge of the Larsen-B ice shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula. Recorded on the Polarstern expedition ANTXXIII / 8 in the Weddell Sea 2006/07. (c) Gauthier Chapelle
Antarctic ice landscape (c) Frank Rödel
Aerial view of the A68 iceberg that broke off in July 2017 from the Larsen C ice shelf in the Antarctic Weddell Sea. (c) Ali Rose, BAS

Dieser Beitrag wurde automatisch übersetzt und kann geringfügige Ungenauigkeiten enthalten; im Zweifel gilt die englische Originalversion.

Mehr

Adam-Moore
How to Become a Professional Diver with Purpose: Turning Passion into Impact
AI KB

Wie du ein Professional Diver with Purpose wirst: Leidenschaft in Wirkung verwandeln

Erfahre in diesem Schritt-für-Schritt-Leitfaden, wie du ein professioneller Taucher wirst. Erforsche Trainingswege, Karrieremöglichkeiten und Fertigkeiten, die du brauchst, um Tauchen zu einer zielgerichteten Karriere zu machen.

vor 2 Tagen
predrag-vuckovic
Frenzel Equalization Explained: What It Is and How It Works
AI KB

Frenzel Druckausgleich erklärt: Was es ist und wie es funktioniert

Erfahre, was der Druckausgleich nach Frenzel ist, wie er funktioniert und warum Freediver diese Technik nutzen, um einen effizienten Druckausgleich durchzuführen und ihre Ohren unter Wasser zu schützen.

vor 6 Tagen
Coral-olga-ga-unsplash
How Grenada's Underwater Art Park Is Supporting Coral Recovery
AI KB

Wie Grenadas Unterwasserkunstpark die Erholung der Korallen unterstützt

Erforsche, wie Unterwasserkunst in Grenada zur Wiederherstellung von Korallenriffen beiträgt. Erfahre, warum das künstliche Riffprojekt für Taucher wichtig ist und wie du dich beteiligen kannst.

vor 9 Tagen
jakob-owens-unsplash
World Shootout Marks 20 Years with Image of the Two Decades
AI KB

World Shootout feiert 20 Jahre mit dem Bild der zwei Jahrzehnte

Erfahre mehr über das World Shootout's Image of the Two Decades, einschließlich der wichtigsten Daten, des Bewertungsverfahrens und wie die Unterwasserfotografie das Tauchen prägt.

vor 12 Tagen
Andi-Cross
How to Become a Diver with No Experience: Step-by-Step Guide
AI KB

Wie man ohne Erfahrung Taucher wird: Schritt-für-Schritt-Anleitung

Lerne mit diesem klaren, schrittweisen Leitfaden, wie du Taucher wirst. Entdecke das Training, die notwendige Ausrüstung und praktische Tipps, um selbstbewusst mit dem Tauchen zu beginnen.

vor 15 Tagen