Title: The Ends of the Earth: Studying the Polar Regions
1The Ends of the Earth Studying the Polar Regions
- Guest Scientist Michael Studinger
- Originally Presented 11 Feb 2006
2IPY 2007 - 2008
- IGYInternational Geophysical Year1957 1958
- Sputnik, Van Allen Belts, exploration of
Antarctica - Large-scale international cooperative
investigations - International Polar Year 2007 - 2008
3http//www.ipy.org/
- What is IPY?
- IPY Timeline
- IPY Draft Themes
4Satellite Studies of Polar Regions
- Making accurate observations in polar regions is
difficult and, for people, dangerous - So one of the most important advances during the
last 50 years is use of satellite observation - Several polar-orbiting satellites with a variety
of instruments routinely observe winds, ice, and
other conditions
5NASAs Earth Observing System
- TERRA
- ASTER Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and
Reflection Radiometer - CERES Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy
System - MODIS Moderate-resolution Imaging
Spectroradiometer
6A Tour of the Cryosphere
- NASA recently released an 8-minute multimedia
DVD, which is also available on the Internet at
http//www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/environment/cryos
phere.html
7Even so, for those of us in the US and most of
the Northern Hemisphere, the Southern Hemisphere
is largely Terra Incognito
- We can look at maps, such as the one in the
next slide, and see shapes and names. - But we tend to think of the Southern Ocean
and surrounding land masses merely as the bottom
half of maps or globes. New techniques are
beginning to allow us to show more about this
interesting portion of our planet - http//www.ngdc.noaa.gov/mgg/image/predict.gif
8http//tea.armadaproject.org/activity/demello/ICE_
CONTINENT_ENCOUNTER.docAntarcticMaps
9Our focus today will be on studying features
beneath the ice sheets of Antarctica
- In the Nov 2003 E2C Workshop, Dr. Studinger
paired with Dr. Martin Visbeck to describe their
researches about Antarctica and ocean currents
http//www.earth2class.org/k12/w3_f2003/index
.htm - In April 2005, Dr. Studinger explained more about
how scientists understand features hidden
beneath polar ice capshttp//www.earth2class.org/
k12/w8_s2005/index.php - Today, he will discuss his more recent
investigations and discoveries
10Useful background informationThe most important
feature about Antarctica is that it is now very
cold!
- Located at Earths southern pole means
that little or no solar energy is received during
half the year, and although the sun shines for
long day lengths in the other half, not much
energy is absorbed
11But it wasnt always this way!
- 200 mya, what was to become Antarctica was at the
center of Gondwanaland, the southern
supercontinent created as Pangaea began to split
apart - It was connected to Australia, Africa, South
America, India, and New Zealand - Fossils provide evidence that climate was much
warmer and lush vegetation covered much of the
surface - Any polar ice cap was much smaller, so sea level
was much higher
12Becoming Antarctica
- Formation of the Circumpolar Current (West Wind
Drift) played a major role in isolating and
cooling Antarctica - Changes in ocean circulation had major effects on
energy transfer on the globe, which will explored
in the next few slides - Consequently, the ice cap grew and sea level was
lowered, and Antarctica became Earths ice box
13- You can study an animation from a PBS NOVA
program showing the breakup of Gondwanaland at - http//www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/eden/media/stt.html
14Modern Antarctica results largely from its
isolation at the pole and the ocean currents that
surround it.
http//www.windows.ucar.edu/tour/link/earth/Water
/images/Surface_currents_jpg_image.html
15What did you notice abut these currents?
- The Southern Ocean is the only area of the world
with flow uninterrupted by land - The general movement is west-to-east
- There are connections with other surface currents
to the north and poleward - These involve both wind-driven surface currents
and density-driven deeper circulations
16Connections between Surface and Deep-Sea Currents
- In the past few years, greater
under-standings have developed concerning the
elaborate interactions between the wind-driven
surface patterns and the thermo-haline
(temperature and salinity) deeper flows. - One model of this is the Ocean Conveyor
Belt, depicted in the next slide
17http//www.grida.no/climate/vital/32.htm
18Much attention has been given to this model,
especially speculations about what might happen
if it changes
- LDEOs Wally Broecker, who helped devise
this model, recently considered the impact on
climate that might ensue if the conveyor belt
slowed or stopped - http//faculty.washington.edu/wcalvin/teaching/Bro
ecker99.html
19 Returning to our Southern Hemisphere focus,
lets consider a model of what happens as the
ocean currents flow around the world. Of special
consideration are places where land masses
constrict their movements, such as Drakes
Passage between South American and Antarctica
20Warm circumpolar water passes through the Drake
Passage and flows eastward in the Antarctic
Circumpolar Current (red arrow). Some of the flow
is diverted southward into the Weddell Gyre and
becomes more dense, sinks, and flows out near the
bottom (blue arrow). The inset illustrates the
two processes that increase the density lowering
the temperature by giving up heat to the
atmosphere, and raising the salinity of the
remaining sea water by forming nearly salt-free
ice in the very cold environment.
- http//www.nsf.gov/pubs/1996/nstc96rp/sb6.htm
21So the circulation patterns around Antarctica
play major roles in global air-sea exchanges
http//www.glacier.rice.edu/oceans/4_antsurfwater.
html
22What lies beneath Antarcticas Ice?
http//www.earthinstitute.columbia.edu/news/story3
_2_01.html
23And what does Lake Vostok look like?
- From the surface, nothing that would
indicate theres an interesting lake can be seen - In fact, more than 70 subglacial lakes have
been identified by remote sensing
http//www.earthinstitute.columbia.edu/news/story3
_2_01a.html
24Probing Beneath the Ice Cap
- Between 1988 1997, NASAs RADARSAT program
studied our planet using SAR (Synthetic Aperture
Radar) techniques. - (Jeff Weissel presented an E2C Workshop in May
2004 about SAR strategies to provide rapid
response to natural hazards) - NASAs Scientific Visualization Studio has
created an animation using these data.
25Lake Vostok Animation
- LDEO scientists Robin Bell, Michael Studinger,
and colleagues have created their animation about
Lake Vostok - http//www.earthinstitute.columbia.edu/news/vostok
/vostok.swf
26- In his talk, Dr. Studinger will describe these
techniques and what has been learned in more
detail. - You can view his web pages about Lake Vostok
through - http//www.ldeo.columbia.edu/mstuding/vostok
-
27Life Under Extreme Conditions
- One of the major reasons to study Lake Vostok is
that it is possible that bacteria and other
microbes may exist under the ice in vast extreme
ecosystems. - Understanding how these extremophiles exist may
be vital to studying possible lifeforms
elsewhere, especially Europa, the frozen moon of
Jupiter
28Antarctic seas also teem with interesting
lifeforms and ecosystems
- Dr. Sam Bowser was the 2003 Keynote Speaker at
the 108th STANYS Conference - Dr. Bowsers research about foraminifer and other
life in Antarctic waters is available at
http//members.global2000.net/bowser/
29- For all these reasons and more,
understanding Antarctica, Lake Vostok, and other
polar regions pose some of the most interesting
and potentially important research questions
facing us at the start of the 21st century.