Literature DB >> 12060731

Temperature profile for glacial ice at the South Pole: implications for life in a nearby subglacial lake.

P Buford Price1, Oleg V Nagornov, Ryan Bay, Dmitry Chirkin, Yudong He, Predrag Miocinovic, Austin Richards, Kurt Woschnagg, Bruce Koci, Victor Zagorodnov.   

Abstract

Airborne radar has detected approximately 100 lakes under the Antarctic ice cap, the largest of which is Lake Vostok. International planning is underway to search in Lake Vostok for microbial life that may have evolved in isolation from surface life for millions of years. It is thought, however, that the lakes may be hydraulically interconnected. If so, unsterile drilling would contaminate not just one but many of them. Here we report measurements of temperature vs. depth down to 2,345 m in ice at the South Pole, within 10 km from a subglacial lake seen by airborne radar profiling. We infer a temperature at the 2,810-m deep base of the South Pole ice and at the lake of -9 degrees C, which is 7 degrees C below the pressure-induced melting temperature of freshwater ice. To produce the strong radar signal, the frozen lake must consist of a mix of sediment and ice in a flat bed, formed before permanent Antarctic glaciation. It may, like Siberian and Antarctic permafrost, be rich in microbial life. Because of its hydraulic isolation, proximity to South Pole Station infrastructure, and analog to a Martian polar cap, it is an ideal place to test a sterile drill before risking contamination of Lake Vostok. From the semiempirical expression for strain rate vs. shear stress, we estimate shear vs. depth and show that the IceCube neutrino observatory will be able to map the three-dimensional ice-flow field within a larger volume (0.5 km(3)) and at lower temperatures (-20 degrees C to -35 degrees C) than has heretofore been possible.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12060731      PMCID: PMC122982          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.082238999

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  2 in total

1.  Observation of high-energy neutrinos using Cerenkov detectors embedded deep in Antarctic ice.

Authors:  E Andrés; P Askebjer; X Bai; G Barouch; S W Barwick; R C Bay; K H Becker; L Bergström; D Bertrand; D Bierenbaum; A Biron; J Booth; O Botner; A Bouchta; M M Boyce; S Carius; A Chen; D Chirkin; J Conrad; J Cooley; C G Costa; D F Cowen; J Dailing; E Dalberg; T DeYoung; P Desiati; J P Dewulf; P Doksus; J Edsjö; P Ekström; B Erlandsson; T Feser; M Gaug; A Goldschmidt; A Goobar; L Gray; H Haase; A Hallgren; F Halzen; K Hanson; R Hardtke; Y D He; M Hellwig; H Heukenkamp; G C Hill; P O Hulth; S Hundertmark; J Jacobsen; V Kandhadai; A Karle; J Kim; B Koci; L Köpke; M Kowalski; H Leich; M Leuthold; P Lindahl; I Liubarsky; P Loaiza; D M Lowder; J Ludvig; J Madsen; P Marciniewski; H S Matis; A Mihalyi; T Mikolajski; T C Miller; Y Minaeva; P Miocinović; P C Mock; R Morse; T Neunhöffer; F M Newcomer; P Niessen; D R Nygren; H Ogelman; C Pérez de los Heros; R Porrata; P B Price; K Rawlins; C Reed; W Rhode; A Richards; S Richter; J R Martino; P Romenesko; D Ross; H Rubinstein; H G Sander; T Scheider; T Schmidt; D Schneider; E Schneider; R Schwarz; A Silvestri; M Solarz; G M Spiczak; C Spiering; N Starinsky; D Steele; P Steffen; R G Stokstad; O Streicher; Q Sun; I Taboada; L Thollander; T Thon; S Tilav; N Usechak; M Vander Donckt; C Walck; C Weinheimer; C H Wiebusch; R Wischnewski; H Wissing; K Woschnagg; W Wu; G Yodh; S Young
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2001-03-22       Impact factor: 49.962

Review 2.  A habitat for psychrophiles in deep Antarctic ice.

Authors:  P B Price
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2000-02-01       Impact factor: 11.205

  2 in total
  3 in total

1.  Cultivation and characterization of snowbound microorganisms from the South Pole.

Authors:  Mackenzie K Hayward; Emma D Dewey; Kathryn N Shaffer; Austin M Huntington; Brad M Burchell; Lynn M Stokes; Brittney C Alexander; Janessa E George; Megan L Kempher; Samantha B Joye; Michael T Madigan; W Matthew Sattley
Journal:  Extremophiles       Date:  2021-02-15       Impact factor: 2.395

2.  Anomalously high geothermal flux near the South Pole.

Authors:  T A Jordan; C Martin; F Ferraccioli; K Matsuoka; H Corr; R Forsberg; A Olesen; M Siegert
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-11-14       Impact factor: 4.379

3.  Ice mass loss sensitivity to the Antarctic ice sheet basal thermal state.

Authors:  Eliza J Dawson; Dustin M Schroeder; Winnie Chu; Elisa Mantelli; Hélène Seroussi
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-09-14       Impact factor: 17.694

  3 in total

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