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This Is the Most Detailed Map of Antarctica Ever Made

This Is the Most Detailed Map of Antarctica Ever Made

If you had to, how would you remove 6.5 million cubic miles of ice from Antarctica? In truth, you have two options: On one hand, you could dramatically accelerate the warming of the world to turn Earth’s southernmost continent into a parched realm. On the other, you could spend several decades zipping across it with planes, Ski-Doos, and people armed with some extremely cool pieces of technology. Fortunately, when a group of scientists set out to answer this question, they chose the second option—in part to understand what might happen in the event that climate change leads to the first one.

In March, an international team of scientists led by the British Antarctic Survey published the highest-resolution map of the geologic underworld of Antarctica ever made. It may be familiar to us as a frozen landscape, but that ice wasn’t always around. In fact, the ice is the relatively new frosting atop an ancient rocky foundation that’s been sitting there for hundreds of millions, if not billions, of years. Now anyone can peek at it, thanks to technology that saw right through all that ice.

The map reveals Antarctica’s bedrock with a startling clarity. Deep, scar-like canyons meander around colossal mountain ranges. Some low-lying patches sit so far down that they’re actually below the present-day sea level. The ice atop one particular crevasse is almost three miles thick—that’s 15 times the height of the Shard in London, one of Europe’s tallest skyscrapers.

Bedmap3 offers a glimpse at what the Antarctic continent looked like last time it was ice-free—about 35 million years ago.
Bedmap3 offers a glimpse at what the Antarctic continent looked like last time it was ice-free—about 35 million years ago. Pritchard, H., et al (2025) / British Antarctic Survey

But this is about more than making a visually striking map. Plenty of Antarctica’s ice is melting thanks to humanity’s unyielding predilection for fossil fuels. Knowing where the ice is thin and vulnerable, and being able to see where its meltwater will flow into the ocean, clues glaciologists and climate scientists into how Earth’s largest collection of (melting) ice will change sea levels across the world.

Before I became a science journalist, I was a volcanologist, so I’m used to seeing maps that illuminate the mysterious, abyssal parts of the planet. I’ve glimpsed at depictions of Earth’s labyrinthine crust filled with reservoirs of incandescent magma; I’ve seen illustrations of colossal plumes of rock flowing and rising through the strange mantle below. These aren’t just vague sketches, but increasingly detailed paintings. They come about not through the power of imagination, but the power of geophysics. Using things like seismic waves—which pass through and bounce about in solid rock—scientists can get a sense of what’s going on where we can’t see it, down deep below Earth’s surface.

The deeper you go, the lower the resolution gets. The seismic waves that bounce back contain information about their journeys, but much of that is open to interpretation. So when I see something like the British Antarctic Survey’s new map of the Antarctic bedrock, I can’t help but feel gleeful—as it happens, it’s a lot easier to peer through ice than it is to see through rock.