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A subglacial lake has been found beneath Antarctica's ice

Published by Business Insider on Tue, 26 Apr 2016


The Antarctic ice conceals a smorgasbord of secrets.Once a warm forested part of the world during the age of the dinosaurs, many fossils of which are just waiting to be excavated, it also features the worlds largest canyon system and a treasure trove of meteorites that were forged in the fiery furnace at the beginning of the Solar System.There are also liquid freshwater lakes beneath the surface of the icy realm.Lake Vostok is probably the most well-known: After being left undisturbed for around 25 million years, scientists were overcome with curiosity and it was carefully breached.Now it appears that researchers have another subterranean lake to add to their increasingly diverse collection of hidden geological gems. As revealed by the research team at the annual gathering of the European Geophysical Union (EGU) in Vienna this month, it is second only in size to the enormous Lake Vostok. The findings were reported by Motherboard.Ice at the surface is shaped by what type of rock its resting on, so by looking at unusual geographic features using ground-penetrating radar, scientists are able to make good guesses as to what may be concealed beneath. This time around, a collection of grooves at the surface revealed to the international teamwho were in fact responsible for the canyon discovery last year using the same methodthat a subglacial lake, complete with its own channels, still exists beneath the ice.The lake itself is around 100 kilometers (62 miles) long, 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) wide, and is ribbon-shaped. It also appears connected to the canyon, and channels leading away from it may be transporting water towards the West Ice Shelf and into the ocean.The researchers, from the UK, China and the US, are meeting this May to discuss the radar data that they have independently gathered, in order to try and absolutely confirm the existence of both the canyon system and the subglacial lake. Both would be of immense interest to biologists, who are keen to explore ecosystems that have remained untouched for tens of millions of years.Whether or not these newly-discovered regions contain life is yet to be seen. However, this possibility isnt a particularly unlikely one: The research team investigating Lake Vostok, for example, have found hints that simple microbes could still be thriving at these icy depths.Possibly heated by hydrothermal activityhot, mobile fluids associated with volcanic processesVostok was reported to have evidence of more than 3,500 different DNA sequences hiding within it, from bacteria and archaea to viruses and even fish. However, the study in question has been openly doubted by other researchers, so more data is required before this can be settled.Life, however, has indeed been found in other lakes across the icy continent. A drill core from one, Lake Whillans, contained 130,000 cells per milliliter of subglacial lake water, which is a density of life similar to that found in the depths of the worlds oceans.This microbial life has survived without sunlight for up to 1 million years, so it seems more than likely that it can also be found in more of Antarcticas 350 buried lakesincluding, of course, this new addition to the family.SEE ALSO:A nightmarish new climate model predicts a gloomy future for cities from Hong Kong to New YorkMORE:You can now tour the Arctic Ocean on a luxury cruise thanks to climate changeJoin the conversation about this storyNOW WATCH: Here's why even one drop of water confuses your smartphone screen
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