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A Really "Cool" Place to Be a
Scientist
You want to talk about world records,
Antarctica is a land of extremes. It is the coldest, highest, windiest,
and highest continent anywhere on earth. Antarctica is the only
continent that has never had an indigenous population of humans because
it has always been such an extreme environment. Just the boat ride
getting to the continent is over the most treacherous seas anywhere in
the world. The inaccessibility of the place and the lack of reliable
food and means for constructing shelter has kept humans away for
thousands of years. But the new technologies developed over the last 200
years made it possible for people to reach these icy shores to explore
and study the Antarctic for the first time in human history.
Since there are no people who claim
Antarctica as their homeland, exploration of the continent has been
shared by all nations of the world. Scientists from all over the world -
Russia, Japan, the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, New
Zealand, South America, and many others - come to this place in an
internationally cooperative agreement to study the truly unique
qualities of Antarctica. Many scientific stations have been constructed
on Antarctica to provide shelter and supplies for scientists doing field
work there.
Some scientists actually live on
Antarctica for part of the year to conduct their research. Almost no one
stays there more than six months. The sun rises and sets only once a
year at the South Pole, which means there are six months of daylight,
followed by six months of darkness. During the winter when there is no
sun, the Antarctic becomes an even more hostile place to be - colder
than cold, BONE-CHILLING cold, and no daylight. Can you imagine living
in darkness 24 hours a day? That would almost be like living out in
space! Hey.....
The World's Biggest
Laboratory
At first, the scientific value of
studying the Antarctic was just for the sake of understanding this
strange place. Recently, scientists have theorized that the conditions
in the Antarctic are similar to those on Mars. Because of the
similarities exploration of the Antarctic has taken on a new meaning for
the search for signs of life in the most extreme environments.
Antarctica is not only fascinating itself, but serves as an excellent
laboratory for studying the effects of space travel, developing new
technologies for exploring other planets and finding extraterrestrial
(yeah, alien) life.
Many, many fascinating things have
been discovered in the Antarctic that have challenged some of our most
basic ideas about what life on earth means. Some really cool
factoids:
Marine Life: Some species of fish that live in the waters
around Antarctica are specially adapted to life in near-freezing waters.
Most living creatures on this planet have hemoglobin in their blood, which gives it that red color we all know
so well. These particular species of fish, however, have extremely low
levels of hemoglobin in their blood. So low that their blood isn't even
red! They also have natural antifreeze in their bodies to protect them
from freezing to death. (Even if you're a fish and the water in all the
cells of your body freezes and turns to ice crystals, you die. 'Nuff
said). If you were to catch one of these fish and cut it open the blood,
gills and all the organs would be WHITE.
Weather: Yes, the Antarctic has the coldest temperatures on the
earth, but that shouldn't surprise you. (Coldest reported temperature
ever was -89.4°C/-129°F.) What most people don't know is that the South
Pole has the clearest, calmest weather anywhere on earth. Most of the
wickedly high winds that everyone associates with the cold and the ice
of the Antarctic are around the edges of the continent at the shores.
These winds are so fast and so fierce they are world-famous and they
have a special name, too - katabatic
winds - and they can blow with hurricane force up to
304kmh/190 mph!
Believe it or not with all the ice in
the Antarctic, there is very little actual snowfall or precipitation. It does snow on the ice during the austral winter, but
measured on an annual basis the Antarctic is as dry as the Sahara
Desert.
Antarctic Ice - The Ultimate
Cool
Many scientists study Antarctic ice
because it is more than just ice. It has accumulated over time, layer
upon layer, building up over the millennia to create a type of
sedimentary rock. Yes, rock. Ice crystals can be considered a type of
mineral, and glacial ice is composed of crystals of the "mineral" water.
Just like sedimentary rock is created over time by the repeated layering
of particles of clay or sand, glacial ice builds up over millions of
years by the build up of snow that never melts.
Scientists drill down deep into the
ice with a drill that works kind of like a cookie cutter, only it cuts
out some really
deep cookies of ice. These
core samples contain many layers of ice that represent what the
earth's atmosphere was like at the time each layer of ice was formed. By
studying the layers of ice in the core samples scientists can learn
about how the earth's atmosphere has changed over geologic
time.
In the winter time the ocean around
Antarctica freezes for thousands of miles in all directions. This vast
expanse of ice surrounding the already immense Antarctic ice sheet
covers over eleven million square
kilometers. The annual freezing of the ocean around Antarctica generates
deep ocean currents worldwide. Differences in ocean temperature are what
cause weather all over the globe. Some scientists fear that if the
global climate gets too warm or too cold it could affect the formation
of Antarctic ice, changing the climate as we know it all over the
world.
Read about the Wettest | Driest | Hottest places in the world!
Also try the Weather Portal to find out about Extreme Storms
and other weather phenomena.
See the World Record Index to see all the
records featured on Extreme Science.
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