Letter

Nature 459, 690-693 (4 June 2009) | doi:10.1038/nature08024; Received 20 October 2008; Accepted 25 March 2009

The Gamburtsev mountains and the origin and early evolution of the Antarctic Ice Sheet

Sun Bo1, Martin J. Siegert2, Simon M. Mudd2, David Sugden2, Shuji Fujita3, Cui Xiangbin1, Jiang Yunyun1, Tang Xueyuan1 & Li Yuansheng1

  1. Polar Research Institute of China, 451 Jinqiao Road, Pudong, Shanghai, 200136, China
  2. School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh, King's Buildings, Edinburgh EH9 3JW, UK
  3. National Institute of Polar Research, Research Organization of Information and Systems, Kaga, 1-9-10, Itabashi-ku, Tokyo 173-8515, Japan

Correspondence to: Sun Bo1Martin J. Siegert2 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to S.B. (Email: sunbo@pric.gov.cn) or M.J.S. (Email: m.j.siegert@ed.ac.uk).

Ice-sheet development in Antarctica was a result of significant and rapid global climate change about 34 million years ago1. Ice-sheet and climate modelling suggest reductions in atmospheric carbon dioxide (less than three times the pre-industrial level of 280 parts per million by volume) that, in conjunction with the development of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, led to cooling and glaciation paced by changes in Earth's orbit2. Based on the present subglacial topography, numerical models point to ice-sheet genesis on mountain massifs of Antarctica, including the Gamburtsev mountains at Dome A, the centre of the present ice sheet2, 3. Our lack of knowledge of the present-day topography of the Gamburtsev mountains4 means, however, that the nature of early glaciation and subsequent development of a continental-sized ice sheet are uncertain. Here we present radar information about the base of the ice at Dome A, revealing classic Alpine topography with pre-existing river valleys overdeepened by valley glaciers formed when the mean summer surface temperature was around 3 °C. This landscape is likely to have developed during the initial phases of Antarctic glaciation. According to Antarctic climate history (estimated from offshore sediment records) the Gamburtsev mountains are probably older than 34 million years and were the main centre for ice-sheet growth. Moreover, the landscape has most probably been preserved beneath the present ice sheet for around 14 million years.

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