Dubai Telegraph - Explorers seek ancient Antarctica ice in climate change study

EUR -
AED 4.327108
AFN 75.40719
ALL 95.469537
AMD 434.725041
ANG 2.108923
AOA 1081.629064
ARS 1650.727597
AUD 1.623956
AWG 2.123787
AZN 1.999297
BAM 1.958219
BBD 2.373352
BDT 144.848906
BGN 1.965433
BHD 0.444753
BIF 3507.596044
BMD 1.178245
BND 1.49628
BOB 8.142056
BRL 5.793314
BSD 1.178375
BTN 112.252074
BWP 15.843703
BYN 3.295298
BYR 23093.607434
BZD 2.369957
CAD 1.610379
CDF 2668.725934
CHF 0.915662
CLF 0.02668
CLP 1050.048955
CNY 8.012951
CNH 8.001941
COP 4426.585029
CRC 540.071638
CUC 1.178245
CUP 31.2235
CVE 110.355877
CZK 24.335949
DJF 209.842743
DKK 7.473127
DOP 69.766763
DZD 155.830536
EGP 62.116854
ERN 17.673679
ETB 183.994217
FJD 2.571521
FKP 0.864175
GBP 0.863712
GEL 3.151798
GGP 0.864175
GHS 13.303544
GIP 0.864175
GMD 86.595675
GNF 10339.902681
GTQ 8.99333
GYD 246.466508
HKD 9.224035
HNL 31.332966
HRK 7.534409
HTG 154.223758
HUF 355.640351
IDR 20525.504027
ILS 3.419091
IMP 0.864175
INR 112.28689
IQD 1543.726344
IRR 1545268.680998
ISK 143.781277
JEP 0.864175
JMD 185.901189
JOD 0.83536
JPY 184.998636
KES 152.169713
KGS 103.03766
KHR 4727.839461
KMF 492.506219
KPW 1060.420699
KRW 1732.75698
KWD 0.362782
KYD 0.982021
KZT 545.938935
LAK 25850.147493
LBP 105523.730332
LKR 379.572039
LRD 215.649098
LSL 19.367285
LTL 3.479052
LVL 0.712709
LYD 7.453332
MAD 10.74397
MDL 20.197117
MGA 4899.092559
MKD 61.651293
MMK 2473.757107
MNT 4214.238473
MOP 9.502858
MRU 47.052515
MUR 55.059614
MVR 18.140327
MWK 2043.341119
MXN 20.233818
MYR 4.621669
MZN 75.301835
NAD 19.367285
NGN 1608.469828
NIO 43.365402
NOK 10.818336
NPR 179.602355
NZD 1.975352
OMR 0.453022
PAB 1.178355
PEN 4.0483
PGK 5.118409
PHP 71.976664
PKR 328.269425
PLN 4.238932
PYG 7242.915151
QAR 4.305546
RON 5.209374
RSD 117.398042
RUB 86.718484
RWF 1723.343166
SAR 4.42052
SBD 9.448858
SCR 16.485242
SDG 707.533214
SEK 10.85829
SGD 1.494239
SHP 0.879679
SLE 29.043548
SLL 24707.209823
SOS 673.437493
SRD 44.070499
STD 24387.298371
STN 24.530715
SVC 10.310866
SYP 130.252583
SZL 19.361242
THB 38.019607
TJS 11.029663
TMT 4.123858
TND 3.418944
TOP 2.836932
TRY 53.464883
TTD 7.987934
TWD 36.970039
TZS 3078.17328
UAH 51.786803
UGX 4430.509825
USD 1.178245
UYU 46.978687
UZS 14307.854103
VES 588.222424
VND 31017.306923
VUV 139.713719
WST 3.189624
XAF 656.77377
XAG 0.013838
XAU 0.000249
XCD 3.184266
XCG 2.12375
XDR 0.816816
XOF 656.779351
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.158781
ZAR 19.283646
ZMK 10605.622741
ZMW 22.279802
ZWL 379.394499
  • CMSC

    0.0000

    23.11

    0%

  • BCE

    0.2950

    24.435

    +1.21%

  • RELX

    -0.3250

    33.255

    -0.98%

  • NGG

    0.7100

    87.6

    +0.81%

  • JRI

    -0.0147

    13.135

    -0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.2700

    63.18

    +0.43%

  • GSK

    -0.3300

    50.08

    -0.66%

  • RIO

    2.8500

    108.23

    +2.63%

  • BCC

    -0.1750

    70.495

    -0.25%

  • CMSD

    0.0661

    23.5998

    +0.28%

  • RYCEF

    0.4300

    16.8

    +2.56%

  • AZN

    0.4100

    183.26

    +0.22%

  • BP

    0.8850

    44.225

    +2%

  • VOD

    0.1850

    16.385

    +1.13%

  • BTI

    2.0000

    60.28

    +3.32%

Explorers seek ancient Antarctica ice in climate change study
Explorers seek ancient Antarctica ice in climate change study / Photo: DOMINIQUE FAGET - AFP

Explorers seek ancient Antarctica ice in climate change study

An explorer and a glaciologist have embarked on a three-month mission to cross part of Antarctica on kite skis in search of ice that is 130,000 years old.

Text size:

The goal of the French duo is to better understand the impact on world sea levels of any melting of the "white planet" if global temperatures rise, Matthieu Tordeur and Heidi Sevestre told AFP in Cape Town before flying to Antarctica's Novolazarevskaya base.

"This is very much a pioneering expedition that combines lots of adventure, but also really ambitious science," Sevestre, a world-renowned glaciologist, told AFP before the pair flew out from South Africa on October 29.

Taking place at the start of the southern hemisphere's summer season, the "Under Antarctica" expedition is also timed to coincide with the COP30 climate conference in Brazil from November 10 and aims to galvanise efforts to curb global warming.

The challenge is formidable: in complete isolation and carrying everything they need, the pair aim to cover some 4,000 kilometres (2,485 miles) in temperatures that could fall to minus 50 degrees Celsius (-58 °F), Tordeur said.

They will be travelling on kite skis, in which the skier wears a harness that's clipped into a kite that pulls them along.

"We can travel, if the conditions are right, 150 kilometres or even 200 kilometres (per day)," Tordeur told AFP.

The pair had a test run last year, when they travelled 1,500 kilometres on kite skis in Greenland for a month in June/July, collecting ice samples.

This time around they'll need to complete a 4,000-kilometre journey in around 90 days.

"We will need to exit Antarctica by the end of January because after that there are no planes and no logistics that can help us out," said 33-year-old Tordeur, who has travelled the polar regions for a decade.

- 'Continent of extremes' -

"Antarctica is the coldest, driest, and windiest place on the planet. It is also the highest continent on Earth," Tordeur said.

"On most of our trip, we will be very high in altitude ... up to 3,800 metres. It is the continent of all extremes."

The duo will be far from any human or even animal life, with Antarctica's penguins, whales, birds and seals concentrated on the coast.

"Once you go inside the continent, there is nothing. It's just a big, vast expanse of whiteness and there is no life," Tordeur said.

Each explorer will drag a sled carrying everything they need, from food to equipment and including two ground-penetrating radars to scan through the ice.

Their meticulous planning includes a spreadsheet of every meal and how much it weighs. Breakfasts, for example, consist of 70g (2.5 ounces) of oats, 30g of muesli and 14g of raisins.

- West Antarctica collapse? -

"We're really interested in trying to find ice that is very deep and very old ... between two and three kilometres in depth," Sevestre said.

This ice dates back about 130,000 years, when the Earth's climate was about three degrees warmer than today and to which it could return by the end of the century if global warming is not curbed, she said.

"We will follow these very old ice layers between East and West Antarctica. And if at some point we do not find ice that is older than 130,000 years ago, it means that some parts of Antarctica collapsed when the climate was at plus three degrees," Sevestre said.

The aim is to better understand how Antarctica will respond to warming temperatures and inform models of potential sea-level rises.

West Antarctica "contains enough ice to raise sea levels by four, five, even up to six metres," the 37-year-old said.

"If Antarctica collapses the next time the Earth is at plus three degrees, it will be hundreds of millions of people who will have to be displaced," she said.

Tordeur and Sevestre hope the goal -- and message -- of their UNESCO-backed mission will reach world leaders gathered in Brazil until November 21.

"It is not too late to avoid the worst consequences of climate change," Sevestre said.

"We know what we need to do in order to preserve these ice masses: we need to decarbonise, and we need to use less fossil fuels," she said.

G.Rehman--DT