Robotic Submarine Snaps First-Ever Images at Foundation of Notorious Antarctic Glacier

<p>Thwaites Glacier's outer edge. As the glacier flows into the ocean, it becomes sea ice and drives up sea-level. Thwaites Glacier's ice is flowing particularly fast, and some researchers believe it may have already tipped into instability or be near that point, though this has not yet been established. Credit: NASA/James Yungel</p>

Thwaites Glacier's outer edge. As the glacier flows into the ocean, it becomes sea ice and drives up sea-level. Thwaites Glacier's ice is flowing particularly fast, and some researchers believe it may have already tipped into instability or be near that point, though this has not yet been established. Credit: NASA/James Yungel

During an unprecedented scientific campaign on an Antarctic glacier notorious for contributions to sea-level, researchers took first-ever images at the glacier’s foundations on the ocean floor. The area is key to Thwaites Glacier’s potential to become more dangerous, and in the coming months, the research team hopes to give the world a clearer picture of its condition.

The images, taken by a robotic underwater vehicle, were part of a broad set of data collected in a variety of experiments by an international team. The International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration (ITGC) announced the completion of this first-ever major research venture on the glacier coincident with the 200-year anniversary of the discovery of Antarctica in 1820.

Already, Thwaites accounts for about four percent of global sea-level rise. Researchers have had concerns that a tipping point in the stability at its foundations could result in a run-away collapse of the glacier and boost sea levels by as much as 25 inches. By studying multiple aspects of Thwaites, the ITGC wants to understand more about the likelihood that the glacier the size of Florida may reach such instability in the coming decades.

Line of concern

The area of concern that the underwater vehicle visited is called the grounding line, and it is important to the stability of Thwaites Glacier’s footing. It is the line between where the glacier rests on the ocean bed and where it floats over water. The farther back the grounding line recedes, the faster the ice can flow into the sea, pushing up sea-level. 

“Visiting the grounding line is one of the reasons work like this is important because we can drive right up to it and actually measure where it is,” said Britney Schmidt, an ITGC co-investigator from the Georgia Institute of Technology. “It's the first time anyone has done that or has ever even seen the grounding zone of a major glacier under the water, and that’s the place where the greatest degree of melting and destabilization can occur.”

The underwater robot, Icefin, was engineered by Schmidt’s Georgia Tech lab. The Georgia Tech team was part of a greater collaboration between researchers from the U.S. and the British Antarctic Survey (BAS), who lived and worked on Thwaites in December and January. A BAS hot water drill melted a hole 590 meters deep (1,935 feet) to access the ocean cavity for Icefin.

“Icefin swam over 15 km (9.3 miles) round trip during five missions. This included two passes up to the grounding zone, including one where we got as close as we physically could to the place where the seafloor meets the ice,” said Schmidt, who is an associate professor in Georgia Tech’s School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences. “We saw amazing ice interactions driven by sediments at the line and from the rapid melting from warm ocean water.”

[Ready for graduate school? Here's how to apply to Georgia Tech.

Historic research venture

In the coming months and years, the ITGC team made up of researchers from multiple universities and research institutions in the U.S. and the UK will publish studies with thorough findings based on the unprecedented data collected during the field campaign.

The array of research the scientists carried out research included seismic and radar measurements and using hot water drills to make holes between 300 and 700 meters (985 and 2,300 feet) deep down to the ocean and glacier bed below Thwaites’ ice. Researchers also took cores of sediment from the seafloor and under parts of the glacier grounded on the bed to examine the quality of the foothold that it offers Thwaites.

“We know that warmer ocean waters are eroding many of West Antarctica’s glaciers, but we’re particularly concerned about Thwaites. This new data will provide a new perspective of the processes taking place, so we can predict future change with more certainty,” said Keith Nicholls, an oceanographer from the British Antarctic Survey.

Nicholls is a co-principal investigator on the project that involved Schmidt along with David Holland of New York University. The research is funded by the National Science Foundation, the UK Natural Environment Research Council, the U.S. Antarctic Program, and the British Antarctic Survey.

Antarctica sea-level background

Over the past 30 years, the amount of ice flowing to the sea from Thwaites and its neighboring glaciers has nearly doubled.

“While Greenland's contribution to sea level has already reached an alarming rate, Antarctica is just now picking up its contributions to sea level,” Schmidt said. “It has the largest body of ice on Earth and will contribute more and more of sea-level rise over the next 100 years and beyond. It’s a massive source of uncertainty in the climate system.”

Watch BBC News report on this research.

External News Coverage: 

BBC News- Antarctica melting: Climate change and the journey to the 'doomsday glacier' 

The Atlantic- The New Video of One of the Scariest Places on Earth

The Washington Post- Unprecedented data confirms that Antarctica’s most dangerous glacier is melting from below

BBC Newsround- Climate change: Scientists concerned about future of Antarctic glacier

Daily Mail Online- Scientists drill into Antarctica's 'doomsday' Thwaites glacier for the first time in a bid to stop dramatic sea level rise as the ice shelf the size of BRITAIN melts at an alarming rate

Yahoo News- Scientists drill into ‘doomsday glacier’ the size of Britain to see if it’s going to collapse

Fox News- Antarctica’s ‘doomsday glacier’ reveals alarming new trait to scientists

Cosmos Magazine- Here's what's below an unstable glacier

PBS Newshour- A risky expedition to study the ‘doomsday glacier’ 

NOVA Next- Scientists find warm water beneath Antarctica’s most at-risk glacier

More reading: Instability in Antarctic Ice Projected to Make Sea Level Rise Rapidly and

Reframing Antarctica’s Meltwater Pond Dangers to Ice Shelves and Sea Level

Any findings, conclusions, or recommendations are those of the authors and not necessarily of the sponsors.

Writer & Media Representative: Ben Brumfield (404-272-2780), email: ben.brumfield@comm.gatech.edu

Georgia Institute of Technology

<p>Icefin Robot gives scientists first-of-its-kind footage and valuable data from deep beneath Thwaites Glacier in Antarctica at the grounding zone. Credit: International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration / Georgia Tech / Schmidt lab</p>

Icefin Robot gives scientists first-of-its-kind footage and valuable data from deep beneath Thwaites Glacier in Antarctica at the grounding zone. Credit: International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration / Georgia Tech / Schmidt lab

<p> </p><p>ITGC researchers Britney Schmidt (l.) and Andy Mullen retrieve the robotic submarine Icefin after its last dive to the seafloor foundations of Thwaites Glacier. Icefin was engineered in Schmidt's lab at Georgia Tech. Credit: International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration / Georgia Tech-Schmidt / Dichek</p>

 

ITGC researchers Britney Schmidt (l.) and Andy Mullen retrieve the robotic submarine Icefin after its last dive to the seafloor foundations of Thwaites Glacier. Icefin was engineered in Schmidt's lab at Georgia Tech. Credit: International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration / Georgia Tech-Schmidt / Dichek

<p>Historic images: Faintly recognizable in the background is a section of Thwaites Glacier's grounding line, a zone pivotal to the glacier's stability or lack thereof and of the glacier's potential danger to sea-level rise. These first-ever images of the grounding zone were snapped by Icefin, the underwater autonomous vehicle engineered in Britney Schmidt's Georgia Tech lab. At top, the glacier, at bottom, the seafloor. Credit:  International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration / Georgia Tech-Schmidt lab</p>

Historic images: Faintly recognizable in the background is a section of Thwaites Glacier's grounding line, a zone pivotal to the glacier's stability or lack thereof and of the glacier's potential danger to sea-level rise. These first-ever images of the grounding zone were snapped by Icefin, the underwater autonomous vehicle engineered in Britney Schmidt's Georgia Tech lab. At top, the glacier, at bottom, the seafloor. Credit:  International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration / Georgia Tech-Schmidt lab

<p>The camp of the research team that included Britney Schmidt on Thwaites Glacier hundreds of meters atop the glacier's very critical grounding zone. The crew lived and researched here for two months out in the open in Antarctica. Credit: International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration / Georgia Tech-Schmidt / Dichek</p>

The camp of the research team that included Britney Schmidt on Thwaites Glacier hundreds of meters atop the glacier's very critical grounding zone. The crew lived and researched here for two months out in the open in Antarctica. Credit: International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration / Georgia Tech-Schmidt / Dichek

<p>The ITGC team involved in the project using the Icefin autonomous underwater vehicle after its last deployment to the ocean underside of Thwaites Glacier and its grounding line on January 12, 2020. Credit: International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration / Georgia Tech-Schmidt / Dichek</p>

The ITGC team involved in the project using the Icefin autonomous underwater vehicle after its last deployment to the ocean underside of Thwaites Glacier and its grounding line on January 12, 2020. Credit: International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration / Georgia Tech-Schmidt / Dichek

<p>Ice melt at the grounding line contributes to seawater and thus sea levels, but the larger effect is to send more ice above it out into the water, where it drives up sea-level much more. Credit: antarcticglaciers.org creative commons non-commercial license </p>

Ice melt at the grounding line contributes to seawater and thus sea levels, but the larger effect is to send more ice above it out into the water, where it drives up sea-level much more. Credit: antarcticglaciers.org creative commons non-commercial license