Professor explores Antarctic desert
Jol presents findings of two-week trip to South Pole
Tara Bannow
Issue date: 1/29/07 Section: Campus News
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Harry Jol, professor of geography and anthropology, recently returned from Antarctica's Dry Valley, where he, along with professors from universities in London and New Zealand, studied the internal layers of sand dunes.
He presented his findings Friday to a group of about 50 students, faculty, staff and community members.
The goal of the research was to understand the structure, age, composition and evolutionary activity of the underground layers, Jol said, adding the information could be used in comparing Antarctica's dunes to those of other deserts and possibly those on Mars.
"One of the ideas was that the internal structure of the dunes on the Dry Valley are filled with ice," Jol said. "We had samples taken from those layers. If similar, dunes on Mars will also have water."
"If you take a look at the images of the Mars dunes and the images of (Dry Valley), you basically can't tell them apart," he said, displaying similar images of both sites.
Researchers selected the area because it is the only dry, desert environment in Antarctica with sand dunes, Jol said.
Kent Syverson, professor of geology, said he believes the Dry Valley is an important time capsule of global climate change because its desolate location has kept humans from modifying it for millions of years.
"Areas like this that are so sensitive to changes can be used to find the canary in the mine, so to speak," Syverson said. "Maybe the dunes are moving now and hadn't so much before."
The team utilized equipment called Ground Penetrating Radar, which works by emitting electromagnetic radio waves into the ground, Jol said. The waves reflect off subsurface layers and transfer the information to the computer by means of an antenna.
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