Beyond the Ice Walls

Antarctic ice walls protect the climate

antarctic ice

The Inland Antarctic ice contains a lot of water. A new study shows that glacier ice walls are important for the climate as they prevent rising ocean temperatures and melting glacier ice. The ice shelves are already thinning due to global air and ocean heating. More oceanic heat comes in and melts the ice when it thins. Only a small amount of current can make its way under the glacier. The thermal energy that travels up towards the continental shelf from the deep sea never reaches the ice. It is part of the ocean floor that belongs to the tectonic plates. It is 500 metres deep and ends in a continental slope. The ocean heat is being transported to an ice shelf.

Formation

The Ice Wall is a natural formation that is formed from floating ice that is fed by glaciers. There are walls that are over a thousand miles long and are divided by the Transantarctic Mountain Ranges. A man or machine cannot explore in this type of pitch black freezing environment.

Beyond the Beyond: Admiral Byrd and the World Beyond the Ice Wall

Is there something going on in the South Pole? The world’s elites have been to the frozen wasteland recently, but no one knows why. The entire continent was demilitarized for scientific research. After World War II, an American Naval officer and explorer led an expedition to the South Pole. Some believe that something he couldn’t explain forced him to abandon his mission. Some flat Earthers believe that there is an ice wall. They view the Earth as a circular disk with a wall around it. The agreement discussed earlier is seen as a conspiracy to prevent people from crossing the barrier. What if there was a land beyond the ice that makes up the South Pole? Or what if during those expeditions almost a century ago what if we discovered something? There might be an evidence of an advanced civilization.

The Ice Wall

The Ice Wall is a large wall of ice. The layer of ice is several hundred meters thick. This nearly vertical ice front in the open sea is more than 50 meters high. Some believe that the tundra of ice and snow stretches forever and forever. All we know at the moment is that snow and hail howling winds and indescribable storms and hurricanes dominate.

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