Antarctic Glaciers

Web Name: Antarctic Glaciers

WebSite: http://www.antarcticglaciers.org

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Welcome to AntarcticGlaciers.org

Glaciers and ice sheets are beautiful and awe-inspiring. The world’s glaciers, ice sheets, ice shelves and sea ice affect us through their connections with the ocean and sea level, and availability of water resources. Environmental change is having rapid consequences in Antarctica, Greenland and on global mountain glaciers.

Antarctica is the world’s largest ice sheet, covering ~14,000,000 km2. Much of the Antarctic ice sheet surface lies above 3000 m above sea level. This massive thickness of ice drowns whole mountain ranges, and numerous volcanoes exist underneath the icey exterior. Antarctica is the world’s fifth largest continent, and it is, on average, the highest and coldest continent.

Antarctica provides a unique record of the Earth’s past climate, through the geomorphological record of glacier moraines, through ice cores, through deep sea sediment cores, and through past records of sea level rise.

The Antarctic Continent

Map showing location of modern ice streams around Antarctica, made using velocity data from Rignot et al. 2011

The Antarctic continent comprises three ice sheets: the Antarctic Peninsula Ice Sheet, the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, and the East Antarctic Ice Sheet. Most of Antarctica is covered by ice (~98%), with ice-free areas on, for example, nunataks (high mountains poking through the ice sheet), James Ross Island and Alexander Island on the Antarctic Peninsula, and the McMurdo Dry Valleys in East Antarctica.

The Antarctic Ice Sheet is drained by fast-flowing ice streams, which respond quickly to climate change; they can thin, accelerate, recede, or even stop flowing entirely. Beneath the thick skin of ice, there is flowing water and subglacial lakes. Despite the aridity and cold temperatures, there is life on the ice, in the ice and underneath the ice.

Antarctic glaciers terminate on land or in the sea, as floating ice shelves or grounded or floating outlet glaciers. The Antarctic Ice Sheet contains 25,400,000 km3 of ice, which, if it melted, would be equivalent to a sea level rise of 58 m[1]. The ice sheet is over 4000 m thick in places, and in places, the West Antarctic Ice Sheet is grounded more than 1500 m below sea level[2]. The coldest temperature ever recorded on Earth was at Vostok: -89.2°C on 21st July 1983. The Dry Valleys of Antarctica are the most similar place on Earth to the desolate landscapes of the Moon and Mars.

Our Antarctica StoryMap Series provides teachers with a comprehensive body of work, with a scheme of work and a teaching guide, to introduce Antarctica, its people, its wildlife and its response to climate change, in the classroom. Check out these free educational resources here.

Patagonian and British-Irish Ice Sheets

This website includes lots of information on other ice sheets, including the Patagonian Ice Sheet and the British-Irish Ice Sheets.

The Patagonian Ice Sheet reached its maximum extent around 27,000 years ago, and had formed a long, thin ice sheet along the Patagonian Andes. The dynamics of the ice sheet are closely related to the ocean currents and Southern Westerly Winds, and so the dynamics of this long, thin ice sheet can tell us about past climate.

The British-Irish Ice Sheet reached its maximum extent also at around 27,000 years ago. The ice sheet reached the continental shelf around its northern and western margin, leaving behind landforms like drumlins, moraines and ice-dammed lakes. It had a large marine margin, similar in some ways to Antarctica today.

We also have many pages on the different kinds of glacial landforms, with examples from Britain, Patagonia and Antarctica, and the different types and styles of glaciation around the world.

In the Glacial Geology section, you can also learn about how we reconstruct past ice sheets, and how we can date these glacial sediments and landforms.

Map of the Patagonian Ice Sheet (PIS) at the Last Glacial Maximum. The modern-day North (NPI), South (SPI), and Cordillera Darwin (CDI) Icefields, and other smaller glaciers, are shown in light blue for comparison.

The Greenland Ice Sheet

Our new section on the Greenland Ice Sheet introduces the ice sheet and investigates how it is changing today.

This section includes information on Greenland’s ice tongues, supraglacial hydrology, and the ice sheet dynamics and mass balance.

Geography resources for school students

This website aims to introduce some key concepts in Antarctic glaciology and glacial landscapes and systems more broadly. The Geography Students section includes a detailed compilation of Resources for Teachers. You can also investigate Antarctica through our Antarctica StoryMap Series.

Pages that are particularly relevant to the post-16 education and the UK A-Level curriculum are highlighted with a yellow flash.

Sections on Glacial Geology, and on Glacier Mass Balance and Flow, may be particularly relevant to post-16 or A-Level students and their teachers.

These relevant ideas are explored in our Science Themes, and include descriptions of different types of glacier, ice shelves, and ice streams. This website also explores the recent rapid environmental changes happening today in Antarctica, and how changes in atmospheric and ocean temperatures has led to ice-shelf collapse, rapid glacier recession and sea level rise.

Click through each of the Science Themes on the website to discover more about Antarctic glaciers. Italicised words are defined in the Glossary. Alternatively, ask a me a question through twitter (@Antarcticglacie) or Ask a Scientist!

Awards

In 2020 we were awarded a “Certificate of Excellence for Geological Education” from the Geologists’ Association.

Our Antarctica StoryMap Series has been awarded a 2022 Geographical Association Silver Publishers’ Award!

The Antarctica StoryMap Series has also been Shortlisted for an ESRI ‘Community Engagement’ Award.

Website authors

Dr Bethan Davies

This website was written by Dr Bethan Davies from Royal Holloway, University of London, as part of an ongoing commitment to education, outreach and impact.

Co-authors include Dr Jacob Bendle, also from Royal Holloway, who is an expert in the Patagonian Ice Sheet, Dr Andy Emery, from Leeds University, who is an expert in the British Ice Sheet, Laura Boyall and Holly Jenkins, both recent graduates from the Masters in Quaternary Science at Royal Holloway. We also have guest contributions from others. For more information on authors, see the About page.

Ice coresResources for TeachersPine Island GlacierGlacier FlowBritish-Irish Ice SheetIce shelf collapsePATICE and the Patagonian Ice Sheet

Most Recent Blog Posts

Infographic on ice coresIda Pfeiffer ProfessorUpcoming fieldwork to Juneau Icefield, AlaskaAntarctica StoryMap Series wins the GA Silver Publishers’ AwardAntarctic StoryMap Series shortlisted for ESRI AwardNew paper: Millan et al. 2022: a new estimate of global glacier ice volume and ice velocityWhat does COP26 mean for global glacier and ice sheet change?Polar Pride 2021Make a Landsat GifCreating digital resources for outreach and science communication

Funding

We acknowledge funding from the Quaternary Research Association, Scientific Committee for Antarctic Research, Royal Holloway University of London, the British Society for Geomorphology, the Antarctic Science Bursary, the Geologists’ Association and the International Association of Sedimentologists. For more information, see the About page.

1. Lythe, M.B., Vaughan, D.G., and the BEDMAP Consortium. 2001. BEDMAP: a new ice thickness and subglacial topographical model of Antarctica. Journal of Geophysical Research, 2001. 106(B6): p. 11335-11351.

2. Joughin, I. and Alley, R.B., 2011. Stability of the West Antarctic ice sheet in a warming world. Nature Geosci, 2011. 4(8): p. 506-513.

By – Last updated

About

I am a Senior Lecturer in Quaternary Science at Royal Holloway University of London, specialising in glaciology and glacial geology. I wrote and developed the AntarcticGlaciers.org website as part of an ongoing commitment to outreach, education and research impact. Read more about me at www.antarcticglaciers.org/bethan-davies.

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