Fish Under Antarctic Ice

Image | Antarctic fish

Caption: Unidentified fish captured on camera below 750M of ice (Reed Scherer (NIU))

Audio | Quirks and Quarks : Fish Under Antarctic Ice - 2015/02/07 - Pt. 1

Open Full Embed in New Tab (external link)Loading external pages may require significantly more data usage.
Scientists drilling through the Antarctic ice cap, at the point where it lifts off the ground and begins to float, were stunned to see fish deep under the ice.
They were drilling at the "grounding line" where ice meets rock and ocean, more than 500 kilometres from open water. The ice there is still three-quarters of a kilometre thick, and under that ice, they found just a thin layer of water on a gently sloping beach. It's a barren and dark environment.
But according to Dr. Ross Powell(external link), a Glacial Geologist from Northern Illinois University, and one of the leaders of the drilling expedition, when they lowered a rover, several small, and so far unidentified, fish approached to investigate.
They weren't prepared to catch the fish, but they hope analysis of sediment and water samples might help explain how the fish can survive, and what it might be feeding on.
Related Links
- WISSARD Antarctic drilling program blog(external link)
- US National Science Foundation release(external link)
- Scientific American story(external link)