Monitoring Antarctic Ice Shelf StabilityAntarctic ice shelves play a critical role in controlling future sea-level rise.

In January 2026, an international research team began the second field campaign of Structural Glaciological Analysis of the Antarctic Ice Shelves, supported by the National Research Foundation and the South African National Antarctic Programme (SANAP). Led by the University of Cape Town’s Polar Engineering Research Group, the project combines expertise in engineering, geophysics, and glaciology.

The focus is the western Fimbulisen Ice Shelf , which regulates ice flow from the Antarctic interior into the Southern Ocean via the Jutulstraumen Glacier. Changes in its stability directly affect ice discharge and global sea level.

The SANAP 2025/2026 team arrived aboard SA Agulhas II on 11 January 2026 and established a field camp on the ice shelf. Early work centred on retrieving data from permanent GNSS stations and phase-sensitive radar instruments measuring ice motion, thickness, and basal melt.

These efforts marked the start of five intensive weeks of fieldwork aimed at understanding how Antarctic ice shelves respond to a warming climate.

Full article by Sebastian Skatulla; Monitoring the Critical Barriers Against Antarctic Ice Sheet Loss 

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