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Experts are seeking to understand the frozen continent since even a small thaw could swamp low-lying coastal areas and cities. Antarctica contains enough ice to raise world sea levels by about 57 meters (187 ft) if it ever all melted.
A six-nation study of the jagged mountain range as high as the Alps that is buried under ice in East Antarctica found that almost a quarter
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Deep below the surface, ice flowing into narrow, submerged valleys often melted because of high pressure and heat from the earth below and re-froze when it was forced up again.
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"We usually think of ice sheets like cakes -- one layer at a time added from the top. This is like someone injected a layer of frosting at the bottom -- a really thick layer," Robin Bell, lead author at Columbia University in New York, said in a statement.
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The scientists said that about 24 percent of the ice in an area around
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"In some places up to half the ice thickness has been added from below," they wrote of ice above the invisible Gamburtsev Mountain range.
The finding could help understand flows of Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets, and possible responses to global warming.
The British Antarctic Survey (BAS), which took part, said it gave "new
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The U.N. panel of climate scientists projected in a 2007 report that world sea levels may rise by 18-59 cm (7-24 inches) in the 21st century, or by more if a thaw of Greenland or Antarctica picks up.
The thaw and re-freeze might also affect chances
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Antarctica's ice sheet formed about 32 million years ago but Jordan said that experts now believed the oldest ice was only 1.4 million years old.
Source:
Reuters,"Some Antarctic ice forms from the bottom up", by Alistair Doyle, accessed March 4, 2011
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