Forbidding
though Antarctica is, the stations located there are nevertheless irresistibly
inviting to scientists, as Antarctica supports a cornucopia of unique life
forms, geologic wonders, and marine and atmospheric conditions
This winter marks the 100th anniversary
of the race to the South Pole. After crossing Antarctica-the coldest, windiest,
driest continent on Earth-the Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen and his team
arrived at the geographic South Pole on Dec. 14, 1911, the first people in
history to reach the bottom of the Earth.
About one month later, on January 17,
1912, the British explorer Navy Captain Robert Falcon Scott and his party
arrived at the South Pole to discover that Amundsen had beaten them there.
Sadly, Scott died on the ice while attempting to return from the Pole.
Nevertheless, the work of the Scott team on their trek to and from the
Pole-including hauling 35 pounds of rock and fossil specimens on their return
journey-helped lay the foundation for modern Antarctic science.
If Amundsen and Scott could somehow
magically be transported back to the South Pole now, they would probably be
amazed and honored to discover that the National Science Foundation's (NSF)
Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, a massive, two-story, science-support
structure, overlooks the spot they worked so hard to reach. Nearby is a
10-meter radio telescope that is currently being used to study the nature of
mysterious dark matter. Below the
surface of the ice sheet ice is a cube-shaped detector--a kilometer on each
side--searching for elusive subatomic particles called neutrinos.
Amundsen-Scott is one of three
year-round stations operated by the U.S. Antarctic Program (USAP), which is
managed by NSF under terms of Presidential Memorandum 6646. The other stations
are McMurdo Station on Ross Island and Palmer Station on Anvers Island in the
Antarctic Peninsula Region.
Forbidding though Antarctica is, the
Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, McMurdo Station and Palmer Station are
nevertheless irresistibly inviting to scientists because Antarctica supports a
cornucopia of fantastic life forms, geologic wonders, and marine and
atmospheric conditions that are found nowhere else on Earth.
For example, researchers are studying
adaptations that enable various life-forms-from microorganisms to penguins to
seals-to survive in Antarctica, and how research into those adaptations may
ultimately benefit human health. Researchers are even looking at the living and
working conditions of research teams already in Antarctica to get a better
understanding for how people can survive in such extreme ecosystems.
Some Antarctic species, despite their
adaptations, are under particular stress. The retreat of sea ice in some parts
of Antarctica are critically affecting two penguin species with particularly
restricted ranges, and recent warming of water temperatures may be influencing
the proliferation of undersea giants, including extremely large sea stars, jellyfish
and sea spiders.
Scientists are also investigating global
changes for which Antarctica provides an ideal study site, such as the current
state of our planet's ozone layer, which protects us from ultraviolet
radiation, and the impacts that are emerging as global climate changes.
Observations of Antarctica's response to a warming globe-such as ocean
acidification and the calving of glaciers off of continental ice sheets-are
important for understanding such factors as the effects of ice retreat on global
sea level and, more broadly, serve as bellwethers for the planet as a whole.
You can learn more about today's
research in Antarctica by reading the text from an online chat that took place
on Jan. 19 about NSF-funded Antarctic discoveries. The chat was hosted by the
journal Science at ScienceLive, and featured Scott Borg, the director of the
Division of Antarctic Sciences in NSF's Office of Polar Programs, and Gretchen
Hofmann, a professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara, who
specializes in polar organisms. You can also learn more from NSF's multimedia
special report on the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station.
-- Lily Whiteman, National Science
Foundation, lwhitema@nsf.gov
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