10 amazing discoveries from Antarctica in 2022
A large number of scientific discoveries emerged from Earth's most southerly continent this year. Here are some of our favorites.
Antarctica isn't just the coldest continent; it's the one hiding the most secrets.
Because of its remoteness and forbidding climate, there is still a treasure trove of weird and wonderful oddities beneath the ice and waves just waiting to be discovered. And in 2022, scientists hit the jackpot. From secret ecosystems and ancient DNA to logic-defying blooms and creepy fish nests, here are our top Antarctica stories from this year.
A "hidden world" under the ice
Researchers uncovered a never-before-seen ecosystem that lurks in an underground river deep below the icy surface of the Larsen Ice Shelf using a massive hot water drill.
The secret habitat lies in a massive chamber around 1,640 feet (500 meters) below the surface of the ice. Researchers found the underground structure after noticing an unusual groove in a satellite image of the ice sheet, but never expected to find anything inside when they eventually drilled down to investigate it.
Instead, the team found thousands of tiny crustaceans known as amphipods, which had them "jumping up and down for joy."
New deepest point mapped
A new map of the Southern Ocean gave scientists their most detailed view to date of the seafloor surrounding Antarctica, including its deepest point, the "Factorian Deep."
Resting at a depth of around 24,400 feet (7,437 m) below the sea surface, or 17 Empire State Buildings stacked top to bottom, the Factorian Deep was only discovered in 2019. But, until now, researchers had no idea how it fit together with the surrounding seafloor.
The new map draws from more than 1,200 sonar data sets, collected mostly by science vessels, and covers more than 18.5 million square miles (48 million square kilometers) of seafloor. Researchers hope to use the sea bottom chart to identify underwater mountains, or seamounts, that may be hotspots for marine life.
Logic-defying bottom blooms
Separate teams of researchers discovered seemingly impossible phytoplankton blooms lurking deep beneath the ocean's surface in both of Earth's polar regions.
Scientists had previously assumed that there was not enough light in the water below polar sea ice for phytoplankton to produce enough energy to survive. But the new studies revealed that the algae can thrive with as little as 1% of the light available at the surface.
In Antarctica, researchers used deep-diving floats to measure the amount of chlorophyll-a, a pigment used by algae and other plants during photosynthesis, in the water deep beneath sea ice and found that there was likely a high concentration of phytoplankton there.
The researchers suspect that a decrease in the amount and lifespan of sea ice caused by climate change could help sustain these bottom blooms by maximizing the amount of light they receive.
1 million-year-old DNA unearthed
Researchers accidentally unearthed DNA from ancient microorganisms, some of which are roughly 1 million years old, while collecting routine seafloor sediment samples in the Scotia Sea.
The ancient genetic material was pulled up from depths of up to 584 feet (178 m) beneath the seafloor and dates back to between 1 million years ago to around 540,000 years ago.
Scientists aren’t certain which species the oldest DNA samples belong to, but the most recent samples likely originate from a group of phytoplankton known as diatoms. The diatoms date back to an ancient period of global warming and could provide clues as to how Antarctica's marine ecosystems will respond to human-caused climate change.
Doomsday glacier in danger
Underwater robots that peered under Antarctica's Thwaites Glacier, nicknamed the "Doomsday Glacier," saw that it is holding on by its fingernails to the seabed below. Once it detaches, its doom may come sooner than expected due to rapid movement and an extreme spike in ice loss.
A new map of the seafloor surrounding the icy behemoth revealed a series of parallel grooves that were left behind as the glacier scraped along the ocean bottom during previously unknown periods of rapid retreat within the last few centuries.
Researchers warn that this type of rapid melting could be triggered again by extreme warming driven by climate change.
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