 |
      
      
  

  
|
|
THE UNITED STATES ANTARCTIC PROGRAM
This is the text of a small National Science Foundation color brochure
about the United States Antarctic Program.
The National program in Antarctica
Without interruption since 1956, Americans have been studying the Antarctic
and its interactions with the rest of the planet. These investigators
and supporting personnel make up the U.S. Antarctic Program, which carries
forward the Nation's goals of supporting the Antarctic Treaty, fostering
cooperative research with other nations, protecting the antarctic environment,
and developing measures to ensure only equitable and wise use of resources.
The program comprises research by scientists selected from universities
and other research institutions and operations and support by a contractor
and the Navy, the Air Force, the Army, and the Coast Guard. The National
Science Foundation (the U.S. Government agency that promotes the progress
of science) funds and manages the program. Some 2,500 Americans are involved
each year.
The program has three year-round research stations. In summer--the period
of extensive sunlight and comparative warmth that lasts roughly October
through February--additional camps are established for glaciologists,
earth scientists, biologists, and others. Large, ski-equipped LC-130 airplanes,
which only the United States has, provide air logistics. Navy and Air
Force crews operate these planes. Helicopters provide close support for
many research teams. Tracked or wheeled vehicles provide transport over
land and snow; small boats and hovercraft are used in coastal areas.
McMurdo, on a barren area of Ross Island, is the largest station in
Antarctica. It has more than 80 buildings, including laboratories for
biology, earth science, meteorology, and upper atmosphere science. McMurdo
is the logistics hub for much of the program. Each spring a landing strip
for wheeled airplanes is laid out on the smooth sea ice of adjacent McMurdo
Sound, and Air Force C-141 and C-5 jets bring people and priority cargo
the 2,100 nautical miles from Christchurch, New Zealand. In December,
when summer heat has softened the sea ice, air operations shift to a skiway
on the Ross Ice Shelf, which only ski-equipped airplanes can use. Wheeled
airplanes can use yet another runway on glacier ice during all but the
warmest months.
McMurdo is the world's farthest south land that can be reached by ship.
In January a Coast Guard icebreaker breaks out the sea ice that weeks
earlier was a runway, and a tanker and a cargo ship deliver a year's supply
of fuel, materials, and food.
The summer population of scientists and support personnel at McMurdo
sometimes exceeds 1,100. In February, the last plane of the season leaves
a wintering population of about 250. Except for an airdrop at Midwinter
(late June) and a few flights in August, the winterers are isolated until
October.
Amundsen-Scott Station, at the geographic south pole, is built on the
antarctic ice sheet. The station is supplied entirely by airplane from
McMurdo, 729 nautical miles to the north. It accommodates more than 125
in summer. About 27 people winter during the 8« months of isolation from
mid-February to late October. The station supports astronomy, astrophysics,
upper atmosphere science, meteorology, and glaciology. Just upwind of
the main station is a clean-air facility. In some of the cleanest air
on earth, the facility monitors world background levels of such atmospheric
constituents as carbon dioxide. Flags of Antarctic Treaty nations fly
in a semicircle near the South Pole itself.
Palmer Station, on Anvers Island just west of the Antarctic Peninsula,
supports mainly marine biology, but also atmospheric sciences. Palmer
enjoys year-round access by ship from South America, 1,200 kilometers
north. The station has two major buildings, two fuel tanks, several smaller
structures, and a dock. Population ranges from 10 to 40.
For research at sea, the 67-meter ice-strengthened ship Polar Duke has
laboratories, winches, and instrumentation. The 94-meter Nathaniel B.
Palmer, a research icebreaker built especially for the Antarctic, began
operation in 1992. Ships of the U.S. academic fleet and the Ocean Drilling
Program also sometimes support research in antarctic waters.
The cold continent
Antarctica is cold and forbidding. The mean annual temperature of the
interior is -57øC. The world's lowest temperature, -89.2øC, was recorded
there. The coast is not as cold. Antarctic Peninsula temperatures may
reach 15øC, though the summer temperature usually is around 2øC. Winds
to 90 meters per second have been recorded on the coast.
The continent encompasses 14 million square kilometers, an area larger
than the United States and Mexico combined. All but 2.4 percent is covered
by an ice sheet that averages 2,160 meters thick and reaches 4,776 meters.
This ice has accumulated over millions of years. Precipitation in the
interior averages only a few centimeters per year, making Antarctica one
of the world's great deserts. Yet Antarctica holds 90 percent of the world's
ice--this is 70 percent of the world's fresh water. The ice moves as glaciers
to the sea, calving the world's largest icebergs. If all the antarctic
ice were to melt, it would raise the sea level an estimated 65 meters.
About 200 million years ago Antarctica was joined to South America,
Africa, India, Australia, and New Zealand in a single large continent
called Gondwanaland. There was no ice sheet, the climate was warm, and
trees and large animals flourished. Today only geological formations,
coal beds, and fossils remain as clues to Antarctica's temperate past.
As Gondwanaland broke up through the process of plate tectonics and
Antarctica moved to its polar position, oceanic and atmospheric conditions
changed. Persistent westerly winds began to circle Antarctica, creating
the immense circumpolar current that flows through the southern parts
of the Pacific, Atlantic, and Indian Oceans. This encircling system blocked
heat transport, causing the Antarctic to cool. Near the coast, prevailing
easterly winds drive a coastal current, and there is a nutrient-rich upwelling
that helps to make antarctic waters biologically productive despite their
low temperatures. In winter, sea ice up to 3 meters thick forms outward
from the coast in a belt up to 1,500 kilometers wide; it covers 20 million
square kilometers, more area than the continent itself. At its summer
minimum the sea ice occupies 3 million square kilometers; the eightfold
annual variation in area has enormous effect on marine life and climate.
A continent for research
The research has three goals: to understand the region and its ecosystems;
to understand its effects on (and responses to) global processes such
as climate; and to use the region as a platform to study the upper atmosphere
and space. Antarctica's remoteness and extreme climate make field science
more expensive than in most places. Research is done in the Antarctic
only when it cannot be performed at more convenient locations.
Glaciology. The ice sheet, deposited in layers over thousands or millions
of years, holds a history of global climates and atmospheres. Researchers
are studying this record and how changes in the size of the ice sheet
relate to glacial and climatic history.
Earth sciences. Investigators are determining the region's geology and
geophysics. Major clues have been obtained regarding the process of continental
drift. Thousands of meteorites have been collected in ice ablation areas,
providing clues to the history of the solar system.
Astronomy and astrophysics. The South Pole is ideally situated for continuous
observations over multiple 24-hour periods. Its high elevation, dry atmosphere,
low sky temperature, and long periods of clear weather provide superior
observing conditions that have enabled discoveries not possible elsewhere.
Upper atmosphere physics. Unique studies of the Earth's magnetosphere
and ionosphere are possible in Antarctica because of its high geomagnetic
latitude. Scientists have learned much about these regions from Antarctica.
Atmospheric sciences. Research has shown that Antarctica's large and
intense area of cold influences regional and perhaps global climate. Far
removed from pollution sources, it is a monitoring area for world background
levels of atmospheric constituents. Antarctica has proved a harbinger
of natural and man- induced global atmospheric change.
Oceanography. The southern ocean's deep water masses and circumpolar
current affect circulation worldwide. Researchers are studying the formation
and distribution of water masses, currents, and sea ice; the physical
basis for biological productivity; and the relationship of the southern
ocean and climate.
Marine geology and geophysics. Study of sea floor sediments around Antarctica
has provided a detailed record of changes in the antarctic ice sheet and
the history of deep ocean currents.
Terrestrial biology. The meager land biota have adapted in unusual ways
to the extreme environment, and the simplicity of these ecosystems has
enabled analysis that is difficult or impossible in the complex systems
of lower latitudes.
Marine biology. The oceans around Antarctica are one of the world's
most productive major regions. Investigators are studying these ecosystems,
the major features and adaptations of marine life to a unique and extreme
environment, and the distribution, abundance, and dynamics of organisms.
Medical research. Biomedical studies are directed toward the physiology
and psychology of small, isolated groups of people.
U.S. antarctic milestones
- 1821--Nathaniel Palmer, an American sealer, sees land.
- 1830--First American scientist (James Eights) in Antarctica.
- 1841--U.S. Exploring Expedition maps 1,500 miles of coast, proving
Antarctica is a continent.
- 1929--First airplane flight to the South Pole.
- 1947--Navy's Operation Highjump, largest expedition ever made to Antarctica:
13 ships, 4,700 men.
- 1957--International Geophysical Year; 12 nations establish 60 research
stations in Antarctica.
- 1959--U.S. Antarctic Program established; continues to this day.
- 1961--Antarctic Treaty enters into force.
- 1963--The plasmapause, a distinctive region of the magnetosphere,
is discovered at Eights Station.
- 1968--An ice core is drilled 2,164 meters to bedrock at Byrd Station,
yielding 48,000-year climate record.
- 1969--A fossil Lystrosaurus is discovered in the Transantarctic Mountains,
showing that Antarctica and South Africa were connected 230 million
years ago.
- 1971--Glycoproteins are identified as the antifreeze in some antarctic
fishes.
- 1972--The research ship Eltanin completes a 10-year, 410,000-mile
circumantarctic survey.
- 1973--Deep sea cores drilled by Glomar Challenger show antarctic glaciation
began at least 20 million years ago, earlier than previous estimates.
- 1978--The Ross Ice Shelf is penetrated by a hot water drill; bottom
life is discovered beneath.
- 1982--A fossil mammal is discovered on Seymour Island, establishing
that Antarctica and South America were connected as recently as 40 million
years ago.
- 1984--At the South Pole, a sensitive ground-based detector records
the largest solar cosmic ray event since 1956.
- 1986--Research at McMurdo establishes chlorofluorocarbons as the probable
cause of the antarctic ozone hole.
- 1988--Sea-floor drilling shows that a much larger antarctic ice sheet
existed 35 million years ago.
- 1991--Fossil of 8-meter-long dinosaur discovered 640 kilometers from
South Pole proves dinosaurs were on every continent.
- 1992--An estimated 6 to 12 percent reduction in antarctic marine primary
production is reported as a result of increased UV from the ozone hole.
- 1994--South Pole Station provides the longest continuous images of
the crash of comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 into Jupiter.
The Antarctic Treaty
The Antarctic Treaty provides the legal framework for the region beyond
60' South latitude. It reserves the region for peaceful purposes, prohibits
nuclear explosions and radioactive waste, permits inspection of installations,
defers territorial claims, and encourages international cooperation in
scientific research. Signed in Washington, D.C., in 1959 by 12 nations,
by 1994 the treaty had 42 parties, representing two-thirds of the world's
population. Subsequent agreements negotiated within the treaty system
include environmental protection measures for expeditions, stations, and
visitors; establishment of specially protected areas; conventions for
the protection of seals and marine living resources; and a comprehensive
protocol (signed in 1991) that prohibits minerals development and strengthens
environmental protection.
For further information, please contact:
Polar Information Program, room 755
National Science Foundation
4201 Wilson Boulevard
Arlington, Virginia 22230
(dfriscic@nsf.gov; 703-306-1031)
The National Science Foundation promotes and advances U.S. scientific
progress by sponsoring scientific and engineering research and education.
Among its missions, the Foundation funds and manages the U.S. Antarctic
Program.
The Foundation welcomes proposals from all qualified scientists and
engineers and strongly encourages women, minorities, and persons with
disabilities to compete fully in any of its programs. No person on grounds
of race, color, age, sex, national origin, or disability shall be excluded
from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subject to discrimination
under any activity receiving financial assistance from the Foundation.
Facilitation Awards for Scientists and Engineers with Disabilities fund
special assistance or equipment to enable persons with disabilities to
work on NSF projects.
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Number 47.050 Geosciences.
The Foundation's TDD number is 703-306-0090.
The Foundation's TDD number is 703-306-0090.
|
|