Sixty Years of Antarctic Research: What the Frozen Continent Can Tell Us About the Future of Our Planet

Science Technology

In 1956, the polar research vessel Sōya set out for Antarctica. In the 60 years since, Japanese researchers in the region have made important contributions to our understanding of the changing global environment. Here, the leader of Japan’s next expedition writes about the special significance of research work in Antarctica for the future of the planet.

Time Capsules in the Ice Core

Extracting ice core samples at the Dome Fuji Station deep in the interior of Antarctica in January 2005. The illuminated part shows the drill entering the ice. Researchers excavated samples from 3 kilometers below the surface.

The Antarctic continent is covered with ice sheets that in some places are up to four kilometers thick. The sheets are made up of compacted snow that has fallen over many centuries; the deeper down in the ice sheets you go, the older the ice you find there. At Dome Fuji Station, some 1,000 kilometers from Syōwa Station in the interior of the continent, researchers drilled down 3,035 meters into the ice, almost to the bedrock, and brought up samples of ice that originally fell as snow some 720,000 years ago. These samples are known as “ice cores.” They made it possible for researchers to extract continuous data showing changes in air temperature and carbon dioxide levels over the last 720,000 years. In this sense, the ice cores extracted from deep within the Antarctic ice sheets are like time capsules that can tell us about the past of our planet and environment.

The Dome Fuji Station was opened in 1996. It is situated 3,800 meters above sea level, where the average temperature is minus 50 degrees. In the depths of winter, temperatures can fall as low as minus 80. To establish a research station in a place like this required a large, heavy-duty snow vehicle that was capable of transporting large amounts of materials and equipment and withstanding extremely low temperatures. Most important of all were the drills. After tests in Japan and Greenland, researchers succeeded in developing a drill with the fastest drilling speeds in the world. This kind of technology was essential to the team’s research work—without it, it would never have been possible to dig down so far and bring deep ice core samples to the surface.

What Antarctica Can Tell Us About the Future of Our Planet

The author in Antarctica in 2001. He has been appointed leader of the next expedition, which will leave for Antarctica in November this year.

The Antarctic has been described as a window onto the environment and the wider universe around us. Polar research involves studying changes on a global level and in near-earth space. In particular, it has an important role to play in elucidating the factors causing climate change, and in carrying out scientific observations of relevant changes and fluctuations. The mechanisms of global climate change are anything but straightforward. They involve solar energy, cosmic rays, geomagnetism, plate tectonics, ocean tides, ice sheets, and the activities of all living creatures, among other things. These factors interact in complex ways, all of them having an impact on the earth’s atmosphere, the seas and oceans, and the plant and animal world, as part of a constant chain of reactions. They are also triggers for further change.

The polar regions, where ice sheets, oceans, and land can be studied together as a set, are extremely rare places on our planet and therefore especially important places for scientific research. If anyone asks me what is the point of scientific research in Antarctica, this is my reply: We are working to find scientific data to explain what is happening to the planet on a global level now, and to show what is likely to happen in the years to come. Our work is an essential part of trying to understand the meaning of our existence on this platform we call the earth—part of the timeless quest for an answer to the question of where we have come from and where we are going.

(Originally published in Japanese on October 6, 2016. Banner photo: A group of Adélie penguins pays a visit to Syōwa Station in 2011. All photos courtesy of the National Institute of Polar Research.)

Related Tags

JAXA climate change Antarctica

Other articles in this report