11/26/2018

EAST ANTARCTICA EPIC


THERE'S something hot hidden under East Antarctica and scientists aren't sure precisely what it is..............though they have a pretty good guess.

East Antarctica is a craton, a big continent-size chunk of Earth's crust. It's solid, and thick. It's not supposed to let heat through from inside the Earth. [That's make it different from the thinner crust West Antarctica, where magma is, in some places, quite close to the surface.''

That craton means that the East Antarctica shouldn't have much melted water at the bottom of its ice sheet.

And yet, as researchers revealed in a paper published Nov 14 in the journal Scientific Reports, there is an unusually high amounted of  melted water down there.

This melt isn't related to climate change, which causes intense melting at the fringes of the continent, it's an old, and separate, warm spot in the ice, insulated and kept far away from the atmosphere.

Scientists were able to detect it thanks to a survey using specialised, ice penetrating radar.

It's not entirely clear what causes the warmth down there. The craton should protect the ice from the Earth's inner heat.  But the research team offered an educated guess :

Hydrothermal energy. A fault in the crust down there might be full of water, pushing up and down between the warm depths of the Earth and the bottom of the ice.

It provides a conduit for heat to escape and triggers melting.

This hidden heat source is of course interesting, in its own right, but the researchers wrote that  it's especially important because it might influence data used to understand the planet's  deep past.

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