‘Frozen in time’: Scientists discover ancient landscape carved by rivers under Antarctic ice

Hills and valleys carved by ancient rivers in an area bigger than Belgium have remained untouched for more than 34 million years. PHOTO: REUTERS

WASHINGTON - Scientists revealed on Tuesday that they had discovered a vast, hidden landscape of hills and valleys carved by ancient rivers that has been “frozen in time” under the Antarctic ice for millions of years.

This landscape, which is bigger than Belgium, has remained untouched for potentially more than 34 million years, but human-driven global warming could threaten to expose it, the British and American researchers warned.

“It is an undiscovered landscape – no one’s laid eyes on it,” said Professor Stewart Jamieson, a glaciologist at Britain’s Durham University and the lead author of the study.

“What is exciting is that it’s been hiding there in plain sight,” he added, emphasising that the researchers had not used new data, only a new approach.

The land underneath the East Antarctic Ice Sheet is less well known than the surface of Mars, Prof Jamieson said.

The main way to “see” beneath it is for a plane overhead to send radio waves into the ice and analyse the echoes, a technique called radio-echo sounding. But doing this across the continent – Antarctica is bigger than Europe – would pose a huge challenge.

So the researchers used existing satellite images of the surface to “trace out the valleys and ridges” more than 2km below, Prof Jamieson said. The undulating ice surface is a “ghost image” that drapes gently over these spikier features, he added.

When the satellite images were combined with radio-echo sounding data, an image emerged of a river-carved landscape of plunging valleys and sharply peaked hills similar to some currently on the earth’s surface.

It was like looking out the window of a long-haul flight and seeing a mountainous region below, he said, comparing the landscape to the Snowdonia area of northern Wales.

The area, stretching across 32,000 sq km, was once home to trees, forests and probably animals.

But then the ice came along and it was “frozen in time”, Prof Jamieson said.

An illustration representing a newly discovered landscape in Antarctica labelled as “Highland A”. PHOTO: AFP

Exactly when sunshine last touched this hidden world is difficult to determine, but the researchers are confident it has been at least 14 million years.

Prof Jamieson said his “hunch” is that it was last exposed more than 34 million years ago when Antarctica first froze over.

Some of the researchers had previously found a city-size lake under the Antarctic ice.

The team believes there are other ancient landscapes there yet to be discovered.

Climate threat

The authors of the study said global warming could pose a threat to their newly discovered landscape.

“We are now on course to develop atmospheric conditions similar to those that prevailed” between 14 million and 34 million years ago, when it was 3 deg C to 7 deg C warmer than currently, they wrote in the journal Nature Communications.

Prof Jamieson emphasised that the landscape is hundreds of kilometres inland from the edge of the ice, so any possible exposure would be “a long way off”.

The fact that retreating ice over past warming events – such as the Pliocene period, three million to 4½ million years ago – did not expose the landscape was cause for hope, he added.

But it remains unclear what the tipping point would be for a “runaway reaction” of melting, said Prof Jamieson.

The study was released a day after scientists warned that the melting of the neighbouring West Antarctic Ice Sheet is likely to substantially accelerate in the coming decades, even if the world meets its ambitions to limit global warming. AFP

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