Space Travel News  
Scientists Observe Drumlin Beneath Ice Sheet

Photograph of the flank of a drumlin composed of glacial till. The length of this drumlin is ~ 1/8 mile.
by Staff Writers
Swansea, UK (SPX) Jan 24, 2007
Scientists have discovered a warehouse-sized drumlin - a mound of sediment and rock - actively forming and growing under the ice sheet in Antarctica. Its discovery, and the rate at which it was formed, sheds new light on ice-sheet behaviour. This could have implications for predicting how ice sheets contribute to sea-level rise. The results are published this week in the journal Geology.

Drumlins are well known features of landscape scoured by past ice sheets and can be seen in Scotland and Northern England where they were formed during the last ice age. They form underneath the ice as it scrapes up soil and rock, and they slow down the rate at which the ice can flow.

Scientists from British Antarctic Survey (BAS), Swansea University and NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory Pasadena used a new technique of time-lapse seismic surveys to find the drumlin, and how it formed over time.

Lead author Dr Andy Smith of BAS says, "This is the first time anyone has observed a drumlin actually forming under the ice. These results will help us interpret the way ice sheets behaved in the past, and crucially, will help predict how they might change in the future".

To the team's surprise the drumlin grew ten times faster than they had ever expected, giving a new and important insight into the drag on the underside of the ice and hence how fast ice sheets are able to flow. The study took place on the Rutford Ice Stream - a 2-km thick, fast flowing ice stream draining part of the West Antarctic ice sheet.

The team used seismic reflection data gathered three times over the last 13 years to map the changes beneath the ice.

Second author Professor Tavi Murray of Swansea University's School of the Environment and Society says, "The new study was recently described at a conference as 'hunting drumlins in the wild'.

"The analogy with wildlife is good. We learn a lot more from seeing an animal born and growing up, than just dissecting an ancient body.

"The same is true of drumlins. By observing the birth and growth of this drumlin, we can see that the landscape beneath an ice sheet is changing at a rate faster than previously thought".

Relict Drumlins
Today thousands of relict drumlins cover parts of northern England, Canada and Russia - countries that experienced glacial conditions. Drumlins are formed as sediment and water from the surrounding area gets picked up by a groove in the base of an ice sheet. The rate of formation is controlled by the speed of the ice.

Dr Smith and his colleagues also observed the ice sheet eroding huge amounts of sediment, 10 times faster than normally encountered. This rate is comparable to glaciers from a previous Ice Age and indicates unsteady glacier dynamics.

The Rutford Ice Stream is about 150 km long 25 km wide and 2-3 km thick. It is a fast flowing ice stream, which drains part of the West Antarctic ice sheet. Ice Streams are a bit like gigantic rivers of ice. They can be as much as a few hundred km long, tens of km wide, and they typically move by a meter or more every day.

Almost all of the ice from the interior of the Antarctic Ice Sheet is drained towards the sea through these ice streams. As the ice enters the ocean, it forms large floating ice shelves. The ice streams can be considered to form the link between the ocean and the more slowly moving ice in the interior of the Antarctic continent.

Ice sheet - is the huge mass of ice, up to 4 km thick, that covers Antarctica's bedrock. It flows from the centre of the continent towards the coast where it feeds ice shelves. Scientists need to understand the processes going on below ice sheets to predict the behaviour of the world's ice masses and their impact on sea levels.

The Antarctic ice sheet is the layer of ice up to 5 km thick covering the Antarctic continent. The ice sheet slowly moves towards the coast, eventually breaking away as icebergs that gradually melt into the sea.

The paper, 'Rapid Erosion and Drumlin Formation Beneath an Antarctic Ice Stream' by A.M. Smith1, T. Murray2, K.W. Nicholls1, K. Makinson1, G. Aoalgeirsdottir2 A.E. Behar3, D.G. Vaughan1 is published in the journal Geology on 23 January.

Related Links
British Antarctic Survey
Swansea University
Beyond the Ice Age
Learn about Climate Science at TerraDaily.com
Beyond the Ice Age



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Lenin Greets Antarctic Adventurers
Sydney (AFP) Jan 23, 2007
A team of British and Canadian adventurers has described the "surreal" experience of arriving at the most remote point in Antarctica -- only to find a bust of Russian revolutionary Vladimir Lenin. The team was the first to reach the Pole of Inaccessibility (POI), the point on the Antarctic continent that is farthest from all surrounding seas, on foot. But an expedition from the former Soviet Union, using huge mechanised snow vehicles, reached the pole in 1958 and set up a small camp there.







  • Test Flights Of Angara Boosters To Start In 2010
  • Researchers Create New Class Of Compounds
  • India Delays Cryogenic Rocket Engine Test Two Weeks
  • India To Conduct Full-Duration Cryogenic Stage Test

  • SpaceWorks Engineering Releases Study On Emerging Commercial Transport Services To ISS
  • JOULE II Launches With Success At Poker Flat
  • Russia To Stop Spacecraft Launches From Far East In 2007
  • SpaceX Delays Launch, Faces New Problems With Static Fire Test



  • Expedition 14 Talks To Martha Stewart
  • NASA Says Destroyed Chinese Satellite Is No Threat To Space Station
  • International Space Station Heads Of Agencies Meet At ESA Headquarters
  • M-59 Drops Off The Shopping

  • Outstanding In-Orbit Performance Of The Terma Star Tracker On TacSat-2
  • Coalition For Space Exploration Names New Leadership
  • Chance For European Student To Join The NASA 2007 Summer Academy
  • Indian Space Capsule Back To Earth

  • China Seeks To Quell Fears Over Space Program
  • China's Manned Spacecraft To Carry Small Satellite
  • No Response From China On US Space Complaints Says White House
  • China Anti-Satellite Test Sparks Space Junk Outcry

  • Conceptualizing A Cyborg
  • Hunt On For Next World-Changing Gadget At US Electronics Show
  • NASA Awaits New FIRST Robotics Season
  • Futuristic Tools And Toys At Largest Consumer Electronics Show

  • A Stellar Moment Frozen In Martian Time
  • Spirit Studies Distinctive Rock Layers With Granules And Platy Beds
  • German HRSC Onboard Mars Express Now In Its Third Year
  • Opportunity Studies Cobbles And Rock Exposures Around 'Victoria Crater'

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement