An international research team deployed the unmanned submersible, ‘Ran,’ underneath 350-meter-thick ice. They got back the very first detailed maps of the underside of a glacier, revealing clues to future sea level rise.
Ran, an autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV), was programmed to dive into the cavity of Dotson Ice Shelf, West Antarctica, and scan the ice above it with an advanced sonar. An ice shelf is a mass of glacial ice, fed from land by tributary glaciers, that floats in the sea above an ice shelf cavity. For 27 days, the submarine travelled a total of over 1,000 kilometers back and forth under the glacier, reaching 17 kilometers into the cavity.
“The maps that Ran produced represent a huge progress in our understanding of Antarctica’s ice shelves. We’ve had hints of how complex ice-shelf bases are, but Ran uncovered a more extensive and complete picture than ever before. The imagery from the base of Dotson Ice shelf helps us interpret and calibrate what we see from the satellites,” said Karen Alley.