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There Is Something Under Antarctica: Hills and Valleys

There are ancient hills and valleys preserved under a thick layer of ice in Antarctica. The frozen continent used to look very different.

Researchers discovered a hidden Antarctic landscape under a layer of ice over a mile thick that shows how different the continent looked millions of years ago

There are ancient hills and valleys preserved under a thick layer of ice in Antarctica. The frozen continent used to look very different.

Where to live? Landfast sea ice shapes emperor penguin habitat around Antarctica

Where to live? Landfast sea ice shapes emperor penguin habitat around Antarctica
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TC - Change in Antarctic ice shelf area from 2009 to 2019

Abstract. Antarctic ice shelves provide buttressing support to the ice sheet, stabilising the flow of grounded ice and its contribution to global sea levels. Over the past 50 years, satellite observations have shown ice shelves collapse, thin, and retreat; however, there are few measurements of the Antarctic-wide change in ice shelf area. Here, we use MODIS (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) satellite data to measure the change in ice shelf calving front position and area on 34 ice shelves in Antarctica from 2009 to 2019. Over the last decade, a reduction in the area on the Antarctic Peninsula (6693 km2) and West Antarctica (5563 km2) has been outweighed by area growth in East Antarctica (3532 km2) and the large Ross and Ronne–Filchner ice shelves (14 028 km2). The largest retreat was observed on the Larsen C Ice Shelf, where 5917 km2 of ice was lost during an individual calving event in 2017, and the largest area increase was observed on Ronne Ice Shelf in

Antarctic Ice Shelves Growing • Watts Up With That?

Our observations show that Antarctic ice shelves gained 661 Gt of ice mass over the past decade, whereas the steady-state approach would estimate substantial ice loss over the same period, demonstrating the importance of using time-variable calving flux observations to measure change.

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