Antarctica is like no other place on Earth. The continent has been locked in glaciers for 34 million years, with a mere 1% of the land surface free of ice sheets.
鈥淚t鈥檚 Earth鈥檚 radiator, central to how the planet maintains livable temperatures,鈥 said Associate Professor of Earth and Environmental Geosciences Joe Levy. 鈥淭he long-held perception is that Antarctica, unlike the Arctic, is very stable and its permafrost isn鈥檛 threatened.鈥
尝别惫测鈥檚 , however, reveals that Antarctica is changing in ways that will alter its influence on global climate and ocean patterns.
The study started as a senior class project in 2023. Levy asked students to read a paper about the effects of warming Arctic winters on permafrost and then look for evidence of similar trends in Antarctica. 鈥淓xisting Antarctic research all focused on summertime warming,鈥 said Levy. 鈥淣o one thought we needed to look during the winter. The average temperature is -30 Celsius, after all.鈥
The class analyzed publicly available wintertime data from 10 automated meteorological stations maintained through the , part of the National Science Foundation鈥檚 LTER Program. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have to go to Antarctica to be an Antarctic scientist, thanks to the amazing data they collect and publish,鈥 Levy said. 鈥淢y students loved digging into these nearly real-time data sets and being part of the discovery process.鈥
The students did indeed find consistent evidence of rising winter temperatures in the McMurdo Dry Valleys. At 1,900 square miles, the dry valleys comprise Antarctica鈥檚 largest ice-free region. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e our laboratory for understanding Antarctica鈥檚 land-based processes, including how water and dissolved nutrients run off the soil into the Southern Ocean,鈥 Levy said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e also a model for how Antarctica could function in a future with drastically less ice.鈥
The class鈥 findings inspired Levy and Gavin Fowler 鈥24, now a graduate student at the University of Chicago, to dig deeper. Fowler, who coauthored the new study, created the code to organize and analyze a massive amount of meteorological information: 30 years of soil temperature, air temperature, wind speed, and infrared radiation data collected by the 10 LTER stations.
鈥淲e were blown away to find that not only were winters getting warmer 鈥 the rate of warming is greater in winter than summer,鈥 Levy said.
When the permafrost can鈥檛 freeze as deeply in winter, more melting and erosion can occur in summer whether summertime temperatures are increasing or not. 鈥淭hink of scooping ice cream that鈥檚 frozen through. Then think about ice cream that hasn鈥檛 been in the freezer long,鈥 Levy said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 softer and a lot easier to scoop. You reach lower levels and expose them more quickly. Then they melt more quickly.鈥
Hurricane-like winter windstorms are known to push warmer air across the dry valleys. When Levy and Fowler removed wind from the data, however, they still saw 鈥渂ackground warming.鈥 鈥淭his demonstrates the air is getting warmer in winter independent of local weather in a particular valley,鈥 Levy said.
鈥淔or geoscientists, this is a wake-up call. We need to think differently and put aside preconceptions about Antarctica鈥檚 stability,鈥 Levy said. 鈥淪tudents were instrumental in this project because they didn鈥檛 bring those preconceived notions.鈥
Over time, Antarctica may evolve from a cold desert reminiscent of the Martian landscape to an ecosystem akin to Arctic tundra. Levy projects that the first permafrost could completely thaw and vanish from Antarctica as early as 2130. 鈥淚n geological terms, 2130 is remarkably close,鈥 he said.
How this evolution will influence Earth鈥檚 climate, oceans, and life in temperate zones over the coming decades will be an important topic for further research. 尝别惫测鈥檚 own near-term next steps include using satellite remote sensing and a network of ground sensors to learn how widespread wintertime warming is across the continent and confirm the rate of warming in locations outside the dry valleys.
鈥淭his project confirms in my mind that the change is inevitable. That means the coming loss of a very special place,鈥 Levy said. 鈥淏ut if we hadn鈥檛 realized what鈥檚 happening to the permafrost now, we would鈥檝e been blindsided by the time the effects are significant.鈥
鈥淎ntarctic scientists do what we do to prepare people everywhere for what the future holds,鈥 Levy said. 鈥淭he more we know about how Antarctica is changing, the more we can prepare. Now we have a date, and we can plan for what comes after the thaw. That makes me hopeful.鈥
鈥 Meghan McDonald