#1 out of 1
15h ago
Antarctica Looks Like It’s Bleeding. Scientists Finally Figured Out Why.
- New study explains Blood Falls’ red flow as a subglacial brine drainage that releases pressure between ice, rock, and Lake Bonney.
- The red color comes from iron-bearing nanospheres in the brine, mirroring a Mars-like red hue.
- Scientists tracked Blood Falls using multiple sensors, linking glacier pressure to outflow events.
- Researchers say the outflow acts as a pressure release point, affecting glacier dynamics and ecosystem processes.
- The finding adds context to Blood Falls’ long-standing mystery since its 1911 discovery by Thomas Griffith Taylor.
- The study highlights the value of multi-sensor monitoring for resolving short-lived subglacial processes.
- Blood Falls serves as a natural release mechanism rather than a violent outflow, according to the new study.
- The McMurdo Dry Valleys form one of the most extreme landscapes on Earth and host Blood Falls.
- Blood Falls has drawn NASA’s attention as a Mars analog due to its extreme cold and dryness.
- Overall, the study connects glacier hydraulics with subglacial chemistry to explain surface features.
Vote 0
