Real Clear Politics
 
Real Clear Science

 
February 23, 2015  
 
Antarctica Holds the Key to Mankind's  Future
By _Luis Andres  Henao_ 
(http://www.realclearscience.com/authors/luis_andres_henao/) 


DECEPTION ISLAND, Antarctica (AP) -- Earth's past, present  and future come 
together here on the northern peninsula of Antarctica, the  wildest, most 
desolate and mysterious of its continents. 
Clues to answering humanity's most basic questions are  locked in this 
continental freezer the size of the United States and half of  Canada: Where 
did 
we come from? Are we alone in the universe? What's the fate of  our warming 
planet?

 
The first explorers set foot in Antarctica 194 years ago  hunting 19th 
century riches of whale and seal oil and fur, turning tides red  with blood. 
Since then, the fist-shaped continent has proven a treasure chest  for 
scientists trying to determine everything from the creation of the cosmos to  
how 
high seas will rise with global warming. 
"It's a window out to the universe and in time," said Kelly  Falkner, polar 
program chief for the U.S. National Science Foundation. 
For a dozen days in January, in the middle of the chilly  Antarctic summer, 
The Associated Press followed scientists from different fields  searching 
for alien-like creatures, hints of pollution trapped in ancient ice,  
leftovers from the Big Bang, biological quirks that potentially could lead to  
better medical treatments, and perhaps most of all, signs of unstoppable  
melting. The journey on a Chilean navy ship along the South Shetland islands 
and  
vulnerable Antarctic Peninsula, which juts off the continent like a broken 
pinky  finger, logged 833 miles (1,340 kilometers) and allowing the AP team a 
firsthand  look at part of this vital continent. 
Antarctica conjures up images of quiet mountains and white  plateaus, but 
the coldest, driest and remotest continent is far from dormant.  About 98 
percent of it is covered by ice, and that ice is constantly moving.  
Temperatures can range from above zero in the South Shetlands and Antarctic  
Peninsula 
to the unbearable frozen lands near the South Pole. As an active  volcano, 
Deception Island is a pot of extreme conditions. There are spots where  the 
sea boils at 212 degrees Fahrenheit (100 degrees Celsius), while in others  
it can be freezing at below 32 (0 degrees Celsius). And while the sun rarely 
 shines on the long, dark Antarctic winters, nighttime never seems to fall 
on  summer days. 
While tourists come to Antarctica for its beauty and  remoteness, 
scientists are all business. What they find could affect the lives  of people 
thousands of miles away; if experts are right, and the West Antarctic  ice 
sheet 
has started melting irreversibly, what happens here will determine if  cities 
such as Miami, New York, New Orleans, Guangzhou, Mumbai, London and Osaka  
will have to regularly battle flooding from rising seas. 
Antarctica "is big and it's changing and it affects the rest  of the planet 
and we can't afford to ignore what's going on down there," said  David 
Vaughan, science director of the British Antarctic Survey. 
Often, scientists find something other than what they were  looking for. 
Last year researchers calculated that ice on the western side of  the 
continent was melting faster than expected. Last month, scientists  researching 
vital geology in that melting were looking a half mile under the ice  in pitch 
dark and found a surprise: fish a half foot (15 centimeters) long and  
shrimp-like creatures swimming by their cameras. 
Geologists are entranced by Antarctica's secrets. On a  recent scientific 
expedition led by Chile's Antarctic Institute, Richard  Spikings, a research 
geologist at the University of Geneva, wielded a large  hammer to collect 
rock samples in the South Shetlands and the Antarctic  Peninsula. Curious 
members of a penguin colony on Cape Legoupil watched as he  pounded on slabs of 
black granite and diorite rising out of the southern ocean.  By the end of 
the two-week trip, his colleagues had jokingly begun calling him  "Thor." 
"To understand many aspects in the diversity of animals and  plants it's 
important to understand when continents disassembled," Spikings  said. "So 
we're also learning about the real antiquity of the Earth and how  (continents) 
were configured together a billion years ago, half a billion years  ago, 
300 million years ago," he said, adding that the insights will help him  
understand Antarctica's key role in the jigsaw of ancient super continents. 
With  
names like Rodinia, Gondwana and Pangaea, scientists believe they were  
significant landmasses in Earth's history and were periodically joined together 
 through the movement of plates. 
Because there is no local industry, any pollution captured  in the pristine 
ice and snow is from chemicals that traveled from afar, such as  low levels 
of lead found in ice until it was phased out of gasoline, or  radiation 
levels found from above-ground nuclear tests thousands of miles away  and 
decades ago by the U.S. and the Soviet Union, Vaughan said. 
The ice tells how levels of carbon dioxide, the  heat-trapping gas, have 
fluctuated over hundreds of thousands of years. This is  also the place where 
a hole in the ozone layer, from man-made refrigerants and  aerosols, 
periodically parks for a couple months and causes trouble. It happens  when 
sunlight creeps back to Antarctica in August, triggering a chemical  reaction 
that 
destroys ozone molecules, causing a hole that peaks in September  and then 
closes with warmer weather in November. 
Exploring Antarctica is something Chilean Alejo Contreras,  53, began 
dreaming about as a teen after reading Robert Falcon Scott's journal  of his 
journey to the South Pole. When Contreras finally got to the South Pole  in 
1988, he stopped shaving his beard, which today hangs down to his chest and  
often goes every which way, similar to his explorations. 
Antarctica is "like the planet's freezer," said Contreras,  who has led 14 
expeditions to the continent. "And none of us would dare litter  the ice." 
Because of the pristine nature of the bottom of the world,  when a 
meteorite lands here it stays untouched. So researchers find more  meteorites, 
often 
from nearby Mars, including one discovered nearly 20 years ago  which had 
scientists initially thinking, incorrectly, they had found proof that  life 
once existed on Mars. 
This is a place with landscapes out of an alien movie set.  NASA uses the 
remoteness of the continent to study what people would have to go  through if 
they visited Mars. The dry air also makes it perfect for astronomers  to 
peer deep into space and into the past. 
During a recent trip to Deception Island, Peter Convey, an  ecologist for 
the British Antarctic Survey who has been visiting Antarctica for  25 years, 
braved heavy rain, near freezing temperature and winds of more than 20  
knots to collect samples of the spongy green and brown mosses that grow in  
patches on the ash of the volcanic island's black rock mountains. He was 
looking 
 for clues in their genetics to determine how long the species have been 
evolving  on Antarctica, in isolation from other continents. 
"I've been lucky and I've gone to the middle of the  continent, so I've 
been isolated from the next human being for 400 to 500  kilometers (250-300 
miles)," Convey said. In this remoteness are odd life forms,  raising hope that 
life might once have existed in other extreme environments  such as Mars or 
is even now hidden below the ice of Jupiter's moon Europa. 
"This is one of the more extreme places where you could  expect to find 
life. It's even here," said Ross Powell, a Northern Illinois  University 
scientist who in January was using a remote-controlled submarine deep  under 
the 
ice in another part of Antarctica to figure out about melting, when  the 
unusual fish and shrimp-like creatures swam by. 
About 4,000 scientists come to Antarctica for research  during the summer 
and 1,000 stay in the more forbidding winter. There are also  about 1,000 
non-scientists - chefs, divers, mechanics, janitors and the priest  of the 
world's southernmost Eastern Orthodox Church on top of a rocky hill at  the 
Russian Bellinghausen station. 
But the church on the hill is an exception, a glimmer of the  world to the 
north. For scientists, what makes this place is the world below,  which 
provides a window into mankind's past and future. 
"Antarctica in many ways is like another planet," said Jose  Retamales, the 
director of the Chilean Antarctic Institute, while aboard a navy  ship 
cruising along Deception and the other South Shetland islands. "It's a  
completely different world."

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