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Scientists have
discovered a
warehouse-sized drumlin – a mound of sediment and rock
– actively forming and
growing under the ice sheet in Drumlins are well
known features
of landscape scoured by past ice sheets and can be seen in Scientists from
British Antarctic
Survey (BAS), Lead author Dr Andy
Smith of BAS
says, "This is the first time anyone has observed a drumlin actually
forming under the ice. These results will help us interpret the way ice
sheets
behaved in the past, and crucially, will help predict how they might
change in
the future". To the team's
surprise the
drumlin grew ten times faster than they had ever expected, giving a new
and
important insight into the drag on the underside of the ice and hence
how fast
ice sheets are able to flow. The study took place on the Rutford Ice
Stream – a
2-km thick, fast flowing ice stream draining part of the West Antarctic
ice
sheet. The team used
seismic reflection
data gathered three times over the last 13 years to map the changes
beneath the
ice. Second author
Professor Tavi
Murray of
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