Australian Government - Antarctic Division Skip navigation
Australian Antarctic Division
Antarctica - Valued, Protected, Understood

  »  Antarctic teacher goes to top of the class
  »  Satellite trackers to delve into diet of emperor penguin chicks
  »  10-year ice shelf project nears completion
  »  Flight to Casey station via McMurdo for Australian Antarctic program
  »  Antarctic doctor to head Australian College of Rural and Remote Medicine
  »  $1.2M for Antarctic science and heritage conservation
  »  Taking medicine from Antarctica to the outback
  »  Hi-tech Antarctic accommodation…it’s just plain sailing
  »  Antarctic medicine in the spotlight
  »  King penguins recolonise Macquarie Island
  »  International award for seabird saving device
  »  New laser to probe Antarctic atmosphere
  »  Surplus Antarctic clothing donated to charity
  »  Antarctic scientist wins Eureka Prize
  »  Antarctic Expeditioners receive Bravery Award
  »  Amphibious Landing Craft in Antarctica
  »  Antarctic scientist a Eureka Prize finalist
  »  ACE CRC funding supports more Australian Antarctic research
  »  Australian Antarctic Arts Fellow wins PM’s Prize
  »  IWC endorses Southern Ocean Research Partnership
  »  Helicopter pilot awarded 2009 Antarctic medal
  »  World's largest non-lethal whale research partnership launched
  »  Whale tagging tells previously unknown story
  »  $36.9 million to keep Australia’s Antarctic program on track
  »  ACAP success in Norway
  »  50th anniversary of the Antarctic Treaty
  »  Whale workshop to forge science partnership
  »  Aerial whale surveys a first in the Antarctic pack ice
  »  Australian polar research at the close of the International Polar Year
  »  Antarctic subglacial mountain range the size of the Alps mapped
  »  $1.5 million boost for whale research
  »  Antarctic Arts Fellowship recipient announced
  »  Young emperor penguins: where do they go?
  »  Rare visit to remote Southern Ocean territory finds changes
  »  Lessons learned from devastating effects of cat eradication on Macquarie Island

10-year ice shelf project nears completion

30 October 2009 

Dr Ian Allison speaking to the media ahead of the first voyage to Antarctica
Dr Ian Allison speaking to the media ahead of the first voyage to Antarctica
Photo: Nisha Harris
Australian researchers heading to Antarctica today will return to the Amery Ice Shelf to complete a decade-long project on the effects of climate change.

The project, known as AMISOR (Amery Ice Shelf Ocean Research), is providing information on the climate history of the region and its probable response to global warming.

Leader of the Australian Antarctic Division's Ice, Ocean, Atmosphere and Climate program, Dr Ian Allison, said that scientists would be measuring and sampling through the Amery Ice Shelf at several test sites through an ice thickness of around 650m.

"AMISOR has been directly measuring ocean characteristics, seawater circulation and the melt-freeze processes occurring at the base of the shelf using bore holes through the ice into the underlying ocean cavity," Dr Allison said.

The program is also sampling sea-floor sediments up to 1000m below the top of the shelf

"Bore holes are created using a purpose-built hot water drill system to melt its way right through the 650m ice shelf.

"Sampling is done while the bore hole is kept open, and includes the collection of short ice cores, sea floor sediment records, and the measurement of profiles of seawater properties.

AMISOR hot water drilling program on Amery Ice Shelf
AMISOR hot water drilling program on Amery Ice Shelf
Photo: Mike Craven
Preparing hose winder for hot water drill on the Amery Ice Shelf
Preparing hose winder for hot water drill on the Amery Ice Shelf

Floating ice shelves provide a buffer between the continental ice and the ocean. They are in direct contact with the ocean and vulnerable to changing ocean circulation and temperature. Once an ice shelf is removed, it is believed that that continental ice streams and glaciers are able to discharge grounded ice more rapidly into the ocean and leading to increased sea level rise.

The Amery Ice Shelf is the largest ice shelf in East Antarctica with an area of around 60,000 square kilometres - nearly as large as Tasmania.

It drains the Lambert Glacier-Amery Ice Shelf system which accounts for 16 per cent of the area of the grounded East Antarctic ice sheet.

Dr Allison said that recent forays to the region had found that parts of the ice shelf base are permeable, and also discovered complex sea-floor communities unlike anything previously reported so far beneath an ice shelf.

"These new observations provide a better context for interpretation of the history of the ice shelf and for estimating future changes and their consequences."

Antarctic ice shelves are important components of the climate system and this project combines a multi-disciplinary approach to give a comprehensive picture on which to base future estimates of climate.