Tuesday 12 December 2023

Antarctica is the driest place on Earth, so even though it is cold, we have to drink a lot of water to stay hydrated here. As our water bottles remind us: hydrate or die! 

But where do we get water in the middle of a frozen ice shelf? We cut and retrieve blocks of snow with a dedicated saw, shovel, and gloves (to avoid contamination). We use a sled to collect the snow blocks and then move it back to the mess tent where this is a large covered container with heating elements in the bottom. 

After moving the sled back to the mess tent, we shovel the snow blocks into the blue container. The heating elements melt the snow, providing us with fresh water that we can drink and cook with. The water is pumped into the mess tent, where it feeds a spigot to fill water bottles and pitchers, as well as a small sink that has both cold and hot water for cooking and doing dishes.

Breaking up the snow blocks before shovelling them into the heated container to melt
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Project updates
Core workshop gets underway

Core workshop gets underway

03 June 2026

We’ve just opened the best present ever – our first sediment core, retrieved from under the West Antarctic Ice Sheet last season.

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Media clippings
Deepest-ever rock core extracted from under Antarctic ice sheet

Deepest-ever rock core extracted from under Antarctic ice sheet

18 February 2026

Analyses will help to reveal how far the West Antarctic Ice Sheet retreated in the past — and what it might do in the future.

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