Worksheets for Secondary Schools

Antarctic Worksheets from Chris

 

Worksheet 1. 

 

Antarctic Ice

 

Read the passage below and then answer the questions following it. The excerpt is from the book Antarctica written by Colin Monteath, an author and photographer who has travelled and worked in the Antarctic for over 20 seasons.

 

Antarctica covers 10% of the world's surface, an area equal to the USA and Mexico combined. Its harsh environment locks 70% of the world's fresh water into ice sheets, in places over 4 km deep; yet a unique ecosystem supports one of the richest concentrations of wildlife in the world

 

The modern-day Antarctic ice sheets consist of about 30 million cubic km of ice spread over an area of 14 million square km - nearly twice the size of Australia.  Only a smattering of rocky summits and coastal ice-free areas avoid complete inundation by this blanket of ice.  Many of Antarctica's glaciers take on enormous proportions.  The world's largest glacier, the Lambert, situated near the Australian science bases Davis and Mawson, is 400 km long by at least 100 km wide.  The Lambert is further extended where it flows out to sea to form the Amery Ice Shelf.  If the weight of Antarctic ice was removed from the continent, the land would rise from 300 m to 1000 m. In fact, Antarctica's incredible mass causes the Earth to be slightly pear-shaped.

 

Antarctica is divided into the West and East Antarctic ice sheets by the 3000 km long Transantarctic Mountains which are up to 4500 m high.  Much ­of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet rests on bedrock that is well below sea level. The East Antarctic Ice Sheet by comparison is much larger and rests on a base that is predominantly above sea level.  Massive ice domes in East Antarctica reach up to 4000 m. The North Pole and surrounding Arctic Ocean are often referred to by geographers and map-makers as the 'top of the world'.  In reality, with the Geographic South Pole at over 3000 m and with a mean elevation of over 2000 m, Antarctica is by far the highest of all continents.

 

In 1995 a single iceberg measuring 77 km by 37 km and 180 m thick broke away from the Larsen Ice Shelf to drift northwards into the Weddell Sea. An even larger one, 154 km by 36 km, cut loose from the Ross Ice Shelf in 1987.

 

 

Questions

 

1.    The area of New Zealand is 269 000 km2. How many times bigger than New Zealand in area are the modern-day Antarctic  ice sheets?

 

2.    The area of the North Island of New Zealand is 115 000 km2. What percentage of the North Island could the Lambert glacier cover?

 

3.    Some people have suggested that countries could obtain fresh water by towing icebergs from polar regions to their countries. In this problem you will calculate what sort of water supply could have been obtained from the 1995 iceberg mentioned above.

a)        Find the volume of this iceberg in cubic metres.

b)       Convert this volume into litres.

c)        Suppose that one quarter of this volume gets lost through melting and poor handling of the iceberg and that only three quarters of it is converted to useful fresh water. Suppose further that each person needs three litres of fresh water each day for drinking and cooking purposes. How long would this iceberg last if it was used to keep the entire world (population 4 billion people) in fresh water?

 

4.    These days there is much concern about global-warming and how this could affect the level of the world's oceans. In this problem you will calculate what could happen to the level of the world’s oceans if the Antarctic ice sheets melted. The total area of all the world's oceans is 360 million square kilometres. The density of water is 1000      kg m-3.  The density of ice is 916 kg m-3.

 

a)     The Antarctic ice sheets have a volume of 30 million cubic km. Convert this volume into cubic metres.

b)     What mass of ice is contained in the Antarctic ice sheets?

c)      What mass of water would this ice produce if it melted?

d)     What volume of water would be produced from the melted ice above?

e)     Convert the area of the world’s oceans into square metres.

f)       What height increase would this produce in the world's oceans?

g)     Actually, there are some reasons why the height increase would not be quite this much, even if all the Antarctic ice       sheets did melt. State these reasons.

h)      How would this increase in the height of the oceans directly affect the area you live in?

i)       Considering the global effects of the increase in the height of the oceans, how would this affect your lifestyle?

 

 

Worksheet 2

 

Surviving In Antarctica, The World’s Coldest Continent.

Part One: What to wear outside

 

Inside Scott Base people can wear normal clothing such as jeans and tee shirts because the Base is centrally heated.  Outside, the situation is, of course, very different.  Clothing worn outdoors must protect people against four things: cold, wind, precipitation, and sun.  Since outdoor conditions and activity levels can change, it is important to have versatile clothing.  This is best achieved by having a range of layers of clothing to choose from.  For example, a person who has just one very thick and warm jacket is likely to be often too warm (when they are wearing the jacket) and often too cold (when they are not wearing the jacket).

 

The extreme cold of Antarctica makes it very important to prevent people losing body heat.  Heat loss occurs through conduction and convection.  The warmest clothing will be made of a poor conductor of heat and will also prevent convection currents occurring in air near to the body of the wearer.  For example, down is an excellent insulator and is frequently used in clothing and sleeping bags.  The down traps a still layer of air and prevents it circulating.  Actually, most clothing provides insulation by trapping a still air layer.  Thus heat cannot be lost by convection, although this picture can change if the down is exposed to wind.  Also, down is a very poor conductor of heat and so very little heat is lost by conduction.  Since down is so light, even a thick insulating layer of has very little weight.  However, down is not the perfect insulator: wet down is virtually useless at providing insulation, as anyone who has attempted to sleep in a wet down sleeping bag will know!  Further, down is much more costly than a number of synthetic products which perform better in wet conditions.

 

Below, you will find two clothing lists. One is for Antarctica. It is from the Antarctica New Zealand website: http://www.antarcticanz.govt.nz  The other list is for tramping in New Zealand.  It is designed to be adequate for conditions where cold, wet and windy weather may be encountered.  However, it is not designed to cover situations where significant snow may be met.  As you read through these two lists you will notice some similarities but also some differences.

 

Clothing worn in Antarctica

Long johns in wool or polypropylene (top and bottom)

Salopettes (these are trouser overalls made of polar fleece)

Polarfleece or wool shirt

Windproof Anorak that may have a fur lined hood. Most often it just has a windproof hood

Windproof trousers

Down overall style trousers - this is like wearing a thick heavy sleeping bag made into overalls

Down jacket - this is like wearing a thick heavy sleeping bag made into a jacket

Sunglasses or goggles - to prevent snow blindness and eyestrain from the 24 hour per day sun in summer

Woollen hat or balaclava - sometimes with a thinner polypropylene hat underneath

Neck gaiter - a tube of polypropylene that goes over your head and round your neck to keep your neck warm and prevent drafts going down your shirt.

Windproof hat with ear flaps over top

Gloves - a combination of thin polypropylene with wool gloves on top with large nose wiper mittens on top. A cord around the neck attaches the nose wiper mittens so that they can be removed when you need to use your hands without dropping or losing them. If they were dropped onto the ice/snow they would freeze solid.

For heavy outside work leather gloves are used

Windproof gloves or mittens may go over the top of the woollen gloves

Very thick woollen socks

Quilted liners (like slippers)

Mukluks - large boots with heavy soles and leather padded lining inside. These come up to mid-calf and have quilted padding all the way up inside.

 

Clothing worn while tramping in New Zealand

Tramping boots (ones you have tramped in before)

Socks for boots plus one change of socks for boots

Gaiters for boots

Parka (waterproof, with a hood and of good length)

Shorts for tramping in

T-shirts for tramping in

Polyprop longjohns and polyprop top

Two layers of wool or similar to wear on your top half while tramping: e.g. jersey plus polarfleece jacket.

Gloves or Mittens

Sun-protection items: sunhat, sunglasses, sunscreen lotion. Wool hat or similar

 

 

Questions

 

1.    Name the four things that clothing must protect people against when they are outdoors in Antarctica.

 

2.    Give three reasons why the sun can be particularly damaging to people working in outdoors in Antarctica.

 

3.    Explain why it could be better to have two thin garments rather than one thick garment of the same warmth.

 

4.    Frequently, people in New Zealand reduce the heat loss from their homes by putting fibreglass Batts inside their hollow walls. However, air is already a very poor conductor of heat. How is it possible, then, that these fibreglass Batts can reduce heat loss so significantly?

 

5.    Dry down is an excellent insulator. Why do think wet down is such a poor insulator?

 

6.    Look at the list of clothing worn in Antarctica. There are four of items of clothing that can be worn to protect the legs. List these four items, starting with the innermost layer and finishing with the outermost layer.

 

7.    A waterproof parka is listed for tramping in New Zealand but it is not mentioned on the list of clothing worn in Antarctica. Why is this?

 

8.    Look at the list of clothing for tramping in New Zealand. Which item on the list would offer the best protection against wind?

 

9.    The list for Antarctica mentions five items that offer particular protection against the wind. List these items. Why is wind much more of a problem in Antarctica than it is in normal tramping situations in New Zealand?

 

10.  Explain why an igloo or a snow cave would provide better insulation against the cold than a tent in Antarctica.

 

11.  When tenting out in New Zealand, people often sleep on thin foam mattresses. When tenting out in Antarctica, everyone uses thick foam mattresses. Why is this?

 

12.  Sewerage and grey water from Scott Base are discharged into the sea through a pipe. All other wastes are returned to New Zealand. What special precautions would need to be taken with the waste pipe?

 

13.  Sometimes goggles would provide better protection than sunglasses. When would this be?

 

14.  We see that down clothing is on the list for Antarctica but not on the list for New Zealand. Give two reasons why such clothing is not on the New Zealand list.

 

15.  There are three ways in which heat energy can be transferred from one place to another. We have already mentioned two of these ways: conduction and convection. The third way is also very important because it is the only way in which heat energy can come from the Sun to the Earth. What is the name of this third way? However, humans lose very little body heat by this third heat transfer method. Why is this?

 

16.  In 1993, Sir Ranulph Fiennes and Dr Michael Stroud completed the first unsupported crossing of the Antarctic Continent. This incredible feat of endurance took 97 days and involved them each dragging sledges of mass in excess of 200 kilograms. In his book Mind Over Matter Sir Ranulph Fiennes states, “Avoiding perspiration is my chief aim when selecting clothes”. Give two reasons why you think he was so concerned about avoiding perspiration.

 

 

Worksheet 3

 

Surviving In Antarctica, The World’s Coldest Continent.

Part Two: Surviving a Storm

 

Your team has been assigned to drill ice cores 40 km from base camp. You have just completed a week of survival training and know that it is essential to bring individual survival packs in case of an emergency situation.  Freak storms can happen without warning. You might need to wait out a storm that prevents you from moving to safety, and prevents rescue teams from reaching you.  Your team must decide which items to put in the packs so that each team member could survive in severe weather for 24 hours.  Choose carefully: your life might depend on it!  Read the list of possible items for survival and decide which you think are essential.  Use the Antarctic conditions fact sheet below to help make decisions.

 

Your main goals are to:

 

·       Protect your body temperature

·       Ensure a source of fluids

·       Ensure a source of calories

 

As a group, decide which ten essential items you will bring. Each pack must contain:

 

·       The same eight items per individual agreed on by all group members

·       Two additional items, which will be shared by the group.  These two items should be different for each member's pack

 

Possible items for survival

pack                                                   camera

flashlight                                            matches

drill                                                     snow shovel/ice saw

tent                                                     sleeping bag

half a loaf of bread                           snowshoes

journal/pencil                                     backpacking stove/kerosene

2 litres of water                                 cheese

beef jerky                                           book

chocolate bar                                    picture of someone you love

mittens/socks/face mask                 scroggin (nuts and raisin mix)

signal mirror                                      rifle

thermal sleeping pad                       blanket

suntan lotion                                      insect repellent

dehydrated food                               cup/spoon

individual first-aid kit                        pot and pan set

sledgehammer                                 radio with spare batteries

toilet paper

 

 

Antarctic Conditions Fact Sheet

 

Land

Ice and snow cover 98 percent of the continent.

 

Climate

Winter extends from May through August. Summer extends from December through February. Temperatures during January and February range from -15°C to -35°C inland, and reach up to 0°C along the coast. Antarctica's inland plateau has been called a polar desert. Very little moisture is in the air there, so dehydration can be a major concern for people working on the ice.

 

Wind and Wind Chill

Winds range from about 8 km/h to 64 km/h. Below-freezing temperatures and high winds can lower the temperature to -100°C and decrease the visibility to less than 30 m.

 

Storms

Storms arrive quickly. They can be very localized: the sun might be shining in one area while a severe snowstorm is happening just 80 km away. Blowing snow can create "whiteout" conditions with zero visibility. Low clouds on the horizon contribute to low visibility and make it hard to see crevasses and cracks in the ice. When in unknown territory, it is advised to stay put during a storm.

 

Light

Due to the polar location, continuous daylight occurs during the summer, the time when scientists conduct their research.

 

 

Worksheet 4

 

Surviving In Antarctica, The World’s Coldest Continent.

Part Three: How Wildlife Survives

 

The extreme environment of the continent of Antarctica is too harsh for most life forms. Air temperatures average well below zero all year round and strong winds increase the  effects of the cold temperature.  During winter there are months of total darkness while during summer there are months of total sunlight, frequently with very high levels of UV radiation.  In spite of the fact that all but two per cent of the continent is covered with ice, there is very little free water.  Only very small and primitive plants and animals can handle the extreme conditions mentioned above.

 

However, we do find abundant life in the surrounding ocean.  This is because conditions for all living things there are far better than on the land.  The water is still very cold but at least remains fairly constant in temperature.  There is no wind.  There is a large supply of nutrients.  This is because the Antarctic waters of drift north and, when they meet warmer waters, the Antarctic waters sink.  As they sink, they stir up nutrients and minerals from the bottom of the ocean.  These nutrients in the water are used by organisms called phytoplankton. These single-cell floating plants carry out photosynthesis, using the Sun's energy, water, and carbon dioxide dissolved in the water to form glucose and oxygen.

 

Krill are the next link in the food chain.  Krill are hard-shelled animals like shrimp, about seven centimetres long.  They live off the phytoplankton.  In winter, however, there is very little light and therefore the production of phytoplankton is very limited too.  To cope with this, scientists believe that krill either become cannibalistic or shrink and use up their own body's reserves.  Krill occupy a key position in the food chain.  They are eaten by seals, penguins, fish, squid and whales.  Luckily for these consumers, krill is the most abundant animal in the world. It is easy prey, being found in swarms several kilometres long.

 

There are about 20 000 species of fish in the world but only about 200 of these are found in the Antarctic sea.  The temperature of the water in the Southern Ocean is in the range -2 oC to 0 oC.  Pure water freezes at 0 oC.  However seawater contains much dissolved salt and this lowers the freezing point.  Fish also contain water.  This water inside the fish does not freeze because it also contains dissolved salts that lower the freezing point.  Some fish also contain glycoproteins that operate like anti-freeze and inhibit the growth of ice crystals.  Normal fish, and in fact all other vertebrate species, contain haemoglobin in their blood to carry oxygen around their bodies.  Some Antarctic fish (the so-called icefish) have no haemoglobin in their blood, but oxygen can still be carried because it is highly soluble in cold fluids, including blood.  The relative paucity of red blood cells (which normally are loaded with haemoglobin) makes the blood thinner, and easier to circulate, thus conserving energy.  Antarctic fish also have very efficient enzyme systems that allow them to remain active at low temperatures. Their activity at 0 oC is similar to that of a normal fish at 20 oC.  To cope with the low light levels under the water that, (ice and snow limit light penetration), many fish species have large eyes and also a well-developed sensory system (lateral line system) to help them locate food.

 

 

Birds have the advantage of being highly mobile.  They can breed on land, feed from the ocean, and migrate north to avoid the extremely harsh winters.  Some  penguins breed on the mainland rather than on the warmer sub-Antarctic Islands,.  To cut down heat loss, they rely on their overlapping feathers, a layer of fat under the skin, small extremities, and a rounded body shape.  The rounded body shape reduces the surface area for a given volume.  A reduced surface area is important because all heat loss occurs through the surface. The ideal shape would be a sphere: a sphere has the smallest surface area of any shape for a given volume.  Three of the four Antarctic penguin species avoid the worst of winter by remaining at sea.  The one exception is the emperor penguin, which breeds in autumn.  The males then spend two months huddled in groups incubating the eggs. They keep the eggs balanced on top of their feet.  The penguins take turns being on the outside of the group.  In this way they can survive temperatures averaging -20 oC and frequent strong winds.  These penguins also have a heat exchange system in their legs. Without this system, hot blood from the heart would flow into their feet and much heat would be lost to the ice on which they are standing.  With this system, hot blood from the heart flows near to cold blood coming back from the feet.  Heat is then transferred from the hot blood to the cold blood.  This heat is not lost to the ice but instead stays with the penguin.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Penguins have extremely good insulation and in summer they can sometimes be in danger of overheating, particularly when they are active and the weather is fine.  In this situation they often raise their flippers.  The layer of fat underneath their flippers is relatively thin so heat loss is increased.  Heat loss is further increased by boosting warm blood flow to this area.  They can also increase their heat loss by altering the blood flow in their legs so that warm blood is circulated directly to their feet.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Seals and whales have similar adaptations to those mentioned above. They have a rounded body shape that has a small surface area to volume ratio, thus reducing heat loss. They are insulated by a thick layer of blubber and they have small extremities.  All Antarctic whales migrate north in winter in search of food: in winter. In summer, seals gain heat by basking in the sun on ice floes.

 

Algae are the main type of plant found on land in Antarctica.  Their simple, tiny cellular structure is able to withstand long periods of freezing. In summer they may be flawed and frozen several times a day.  Algae can be found on and under rocks, on areas of permanent snow, and at the bottom of lakes.  Lichens have been found within 400 km of the South Pole. Although they do contain anti-freeze compounds in their cells, and can function with less light and water than other plants, they recover very slowly from freezing after winter.  Recently New Zealand scientists discovered lichens photosynthesising at  -20 oC, the lowest ever recorded.

 

 

Questions

 

1.    In Antarctica, is most life found on the land or in the water? Explain carefully why this is so.

 

2.    Phytoplankton are the first living organisms in the food chain. On what do they feed?

 

3.    Krill is an important link in the food chain. List the organisms that rely upon krill for food. Why are krill less plentiful in winter?

 

4.    Antarctic fish live in sub-zero temperatures. How do they prevent the water inside them from freezing? Give two ways in which they do this.

 

5.    What important task is normally carried out by haemoglobin in blood? How is it that Antarctic fish can carry out this task without haemoglobin? What advantage is there for these fish in not having haemoglobin in their blood?

 

6.    List four ways in which penguins minimise heat loss.

 

7.    How do emperor penguins keep eggs warm in winter?

 

8.    Emperor penguins huddle together in winter. Explain carefully, in a proper scientific way, what the advantage is in this group behaviour.

 

9.    Sometimes in summer penguins get too hot. Describe two ways in which penguins can increase the amount of heat they lose.

 

10. Give three ways in which whales minimise their heat loss.

 

11.  In winter, whales migrate north because there is not enough food in Antarctic waters for them. Carefully outline the chain of events that, in winter, results in insufficient food for whales.

 

12.  Some humans have established permanent homes in Antarctica. Where in Antarctica do you think their homes might be? Reference to a map of Antarctica could help you answer this question.

 

13.  A group of scientists is planning to stay twelve months at Scott Base. What special problems must they overcome in order to do this successfully? Explain how you think they could overcome these problems.

 

14.  Polar bears and other animals live and thrive in Arctic regions. Give some reasons why no such animals are found living in Antarctica.

 

 

Worksheet 5

 

Surviving In Antarctica, The World’s Coldest Continent.

Part Four: Under The Ice

 

Antarctica is by far the coldest continent.  The world's lowest recorded temperature (-89.2o C) was measured in 1982 at Vostok Station (Russia) on the high inland ice sheet.  Mean temperatures of the coldest months are -20o C to -30o C on the coast and -40o C to -70o C in the interior.  Midsummer temperatures range from a mean of about 0o C on the coast to between -20o C and -35o C in the interior.  These temperatures are far lower than those of the Arctic. How can creatures living in the sea or in lakes survive such low temperatures?  And why doesn’t the water all turn to ice?

 

The answers to these questions depend in part on some very strange properties of water.  The Encyclopaedia Britannica describes water as “an extraordinary substance”.  For example, ice is actually less dense than water. This is most unusual: almost all substances become denser when they freeze.  There is another unusual fact about the density of fresh water.  As water cools it becomes denser until it reaches a temperature of 4o C.  At this temperature it has maximum density. As the water becomes still cooler it decreases in density.

 

 

In seawater, the salt changes this picture in two ways.  Firstly, the more salt the lower the freezing point.  Typical seawater freezes at about 2o C.  Secondly, in seawater, as the temperature decreases, the density keeps increasing until the water freezes.

 

The exercises below will help you understand how these strange properties of water enable survival in sub-zero temperatures.  Copy out the sentences in each exercise and complete them by choosing one word from the words given in the brackets.

 

 

 

 

1.     Imagine a lake of fresh water in winter.  The water on the top of the lake is exposed to the cold air above and cools. This decrease in temperature results in an (increase/decrease) in density.  This (increase/decrease) in density causes the water to (rise/sink) to the (top/bottom) of the lake.  Warmer, (more/less) dense water then moves up to the (bottom/top) of the lake.  This water in turn is (heated/cooled) and descends to the bottom.  In this way, a (conduction/convection/radiation) current is set up in the lake.  It is easy to cool the lake down because the (coldest/warmest) water always comes to the top where it is exposed to the (warm/cold) air.

 

2.   The above exercise explains what really does happen in freshwater lakes and in seawater until the temperature reaches 4o C.  Until this temperature is reached cooling can take place easily because (conduction/convection/ radiation) currents help it.  Let us now imagine that water has no strange properties.  In this case the currents would continue to aid cooling until the water temperature reaches (boiling/freezing) point.  As the top layer of water (melts/freezes) small pieces of ice would be formed.  In this imaginary situation, these pieces of ice would be (more/less) dense than the water and so they would (sink/rise) to the (top/bottom).  (Ice/Water) in the top layer would continue to (melt/freeze).  These new pieces of ice would also sink to the bottom. In this way eventually all the water would freeze.  Once this had happened, most life would (continue/cease).

 

3.   Luckily, what really happens in freshwater lakes below 4o C is different.  Suppose the whole lake has reached a temperature of 4o C.  The cold air above the lake (heats/cools) the (top/bottom) layer of water.  Suppose it is cooled to 3o C.  Now it is (more/less) dense than the rest of the water and so it (does/does not) sink to the bottom.  No more convection currents can take place. The top water layer can continue to lose heat to the (air/ice).  Lower water layers must lose heat by (conduction/convection/radiation) to water layers above them.  Water is actually a poor (conductor/convector/radiator) of heat and so heat loss is (fast/slow).  When the top of the lake reaches (100o C/0o C) it freezes.  The ice that is formed is (more/less) dense than the water and so this ice floats on the surface.  Eventually a layer of ice may be formed that covers the complete lake. Ice is also a poor (conductor/insulator) of heat and so it acts as a good (conductor/insulator), protecting the water below.  While the top of the lake is (frozen/liquid), the bottom of the lake may maintain a temperature of (0o C/4o C).  Thus, life in the lake (can/cannot) continue.

 

4.     With seawater, warmer water is always (less/more) dense than colder water, and so the convection currents continue to bring warmer water to the top layer until the top layer freezes.  This layer of ice remains on the top of the ocean, being (less/more) dense than the water beneath.  Because it is a poor (conductor/insulator) of heat, the ice forms a good (conducting/insulating) layer, protecting the water below it. Any snow that may fall on the ice further aids this protection.  As more water freezes the ice layer becomes (thicker/thinner) and provides (better/worse) insulation.  Seasonal sea ice rarely becomes more than about two metres thick.

 

      As water freezes it contains very little salt: the only salt it contains is in small amounts of seawater trapped in pockets in the ice.  As a result, the remaining seawater underneath the ice contains even (less/more) salt.  This (decreased/increased) concentration of salt (lowers/raises) the freezing point of the remaining seawater making it (easier/harder) to freeze.  The low temperature and the increased salt concentration of the top layer of water both make it (more/less) dense, causing it to (rise to the top/sink to the bottom) of the ocean.  This continued convection current keeps the water circulating.  As a result of this not just the top layer but all the water in the ocean must be cooled to the new lower freezing point before any more freezing can occur.  Once the ice becomes more than about (ten/two) metres thick this is very difficult to achieve because the thick ice layer is such a good (conductor/insulator).  In this way the ocean remains largely (frozen/unfrozen) and life (can/cannot) continue in it. Further south it is (warmer/colder) and the sea ice can be (thicker/thinner).  For example at latitude 78o S, McMurdo Sound has sea ice several metres thick. I n spite of this, Weddell seals are able to maintain breathing holes through the (summer/winter) by gnawing away at the ice.

 

 

Worksheet 6

 

Experiment: Staying warm in cold places.

 

Introduction

 

A person working outdoors in Antarctica can lose a lot of body heat in a short time. This is because there is a large temperature difference between their body (37o C) and their surroundings (-30o C in the Antarctic interior in midsummer!). In order to minimise this heat loss, people in Antarctica wear thick insulating clothing. This experiment explores these two ideas.

 

Aims

 

1.      To find how the rate of heat loss depends on the temperature difference.

2.      To find how the rate of heat loss depends on the thickness of insulation.

 

Method

 

Please read this method through completely before it you start carrying it out. It may need to be varied depending on the amount and type of equipment that you have.

 

1.    Find three containers such as beakers or cans of the same size and shape.  Into each put the same amount of hot water, the hottest water you can obtain.

2.    Cover each container with a lid made of cardboard or similar.  Through a small hole in this lid put a thermometer so that the temperature of the water can be measured.

3.    Leave the first container as it is.  Wrap insulation around the second container, including the top and the bottom of the container.  Wrap the same sort of insulation around the third container, making sure that it is twice as thick as the insulation wrapped around the second container.

4.    For each container, record the temperature as they cool down at one-minute intervals.

5.    Continue this recording for as long as you can until the temperature is not changing much from one reading to the next.

6.    Measure the room temperature.

7.    Set out your results in a table like the one below.  You will need more lines in your own table.

8.    Graph your results on a full-page graph.  On the vertical axis put temperature.  On the horizontal axis put time. Plot the results for all three containers on the one graph so that it is easy to compare the three sets of results.

 

Results

Room Temperature:              o C

 

Time (minutes)

Temperature (o C)

Container with no insulation

Temperature (o C)

Container with single insulation

Temperature (o C)

Container with double insulation

0

 

 

 

1

 

 

 

2

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Conclusions

 

Part A

Consider just the container with the single layer of insulation.

1.      When is the container losing heat fastest?

2.      How does the gradient of the graph show us how fast the container is losing heat?

3.      Calculate the value of the temperature 40o C above room temperature. How long does it take the container to cool down 1o C from this temperature?

4.      Calculate the value of the temperature 20o C above room temperature. How long does it take the container to cool down 1o C from this temperature?

5.      Read the first aim of this experiment again. Write a conclusion for this experiment based on this aim.

 

Part B

Now consider all three containers.

1.      Which container cooled down the fastest?

2.      Which container maintained its temperature the best?

3.      From the results in your table, calculate the temperature decrease for each container in the first five minutes of the experiment.

4.      From your graph, determine how long it took each container to reach a temperature of 30o C.

5.      Reread the second aim of this experiment. Write a conclusion for this experiment based on this aim.

 

Worksheet 7

 

The Ozone Hole

 

The Electromagnetic Spectrum

 

Light is one example of electromagnetic radiation.  Other examples include X-rays, ultraviolet (UV), infrared, TV waves, radio waves, and microwaves. All the energy that comes to us from the Sun comes in the form of electromagnetic radiation.  Although these waves may seem to us to have different properties, to scientists they are all different versions of electromagnetic radiation, and they all have a number of important properties in common.  For example, unlike sound waves, they can all travel through a vacuum, and they all travel through a vacuum with the same very high speed. This speed is 300 000 000 m s-1.  Scientists have not found anything else that travels as fast as this.  Even sound travels about one million times slower than light.  On Earth, it is essential that we receive electromagnetic radiation from the Sun. Certainly, without the heat and light we receive, life as we know it could not exist.  However, some other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum that we also receive from the Sun are harmful, not beneficial.  For example, high UV radiation levels cause sunburn and skin cancer in humans and can also be damaging to other animals, plants and bacteria. We rely on our atmosphere to protect us from this radiation.  In particular, we rely on a gas called ozone that is in the atmosphere.

 

Ozone

 

Ozone gas consists of molecules of oxygen.  However, each molecule contains three atoms of oxygen.  Normal molecules of oxygen contain only two atoms of oxygen.  Ozone is actually poisonous. If it were found low in our atmosphere, it would be a danger to life. However, it is found mostly between about 20 kilometres and 25 kilometres above the ground in the part of our atmosphere known as the stratosphere.  Only a very small part of the atmosphere is made up from ozone, about 0.00004%.  Luckily, even this very small amount of ozone is able to protect life on Earth from the dangers of UV radiation.  Ozone is formed from normal oxygen by the action of sunlight and also by the action of lightning.  Actually, sunlight and lightning both create and destroy ozone: however, normally the amount of ozone remains constant.

 

 

The Ozone Hole

 

In 1985, British Antarctic Survey scientists reported that spring ozone levels had decreased by more than 30% over a ten-year period.  Strangely enough, autumn ozone levels had stayed approximately the same.  By 1993, spring ozone levels had plummeted to about 70% below the levels in the 1960s.  Research found that chemicals called CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons) had been responsible for this rapid decline in ozone.  These chemicals had been used in refrigerators, air-conditioners, plastic foams and aerosol sprays.  About one million tonnes had been produced each year.  CFCs are very stable compounds that can remain in the atmosphere for over 100 years.  However, if they get into the stratosphere they can be broken down by UV radiation. When this happens they release free chlorine atoms that destroy the ozone.  One free chlorine atom can destroy up to 100 000 ozone molecules.  This research led to a worldwide agreement to ban CFCs. Ongoing studies have found that CFCs are not the only chemicals that can destroy ozone.  It is important that we make sure that the chemicals that replace CFCs in our air-conditioning systems, refrigerators and so on are not harmful to the ozone layer.

 

The ozone hole begins to appear in spring for two reasons.  First, at this time the sunlight is becoming stronger.  Through the autumn and the winter, chlorine molecules have been building up in the stratosphere. The stronger sunlight in spring is able to convert these chlorine molecules into free chlorine atoms.  Second, at this time there is a strong wind in the stratosphere circulating around Antarctica. This strong circulating wind, called a vortex, keeps the chlorine inside a region over the Antarctic continent.  When this happens, it is possible that 70% of the ozone layer can be destroyed in less than one month.  In late spring the strong wind weakens and allows ozone to come in from other parts of the stratosphere and so the hole begins to fill up again.  The Arctic is affected much less in this way because no vortex forms.  The process of ozone destruction is a complicated one and is still only partly understood.  However, it does seem that the very low temperatures in the stratosphere above Antarctica do aid ozone destruction.  Therefore Antarctica, being the coldest place on Earth, is most likely to witness the greatest destruction of the ozone layer.  Such destruction is of particular concern to people who live in countries near Antarctica, such as New Zealand and Australia.

 

 

Problems Caused By The Ozone Hole

 

In spring, there is a huge reduction in the amount of ozone in the atmosphere above Antarctica. Luckily, the reduction in the ozone layer above more densely populated areas is not so large. However, scientists have calculated that even a small decrease of 2.5% in the ozone layer leads to a 4% increase in ultraviolet radiation, a 10% increase in skin cancer in humans, and a 2% increase in deaths from skin cancer.  The increased UV radiation can also produce cataracts in the eyes of humans and animals.

 

Increased UV radiation also has an adverse effect on the ecosystem of marine life in the entire Southern Ocean.  At the base of the food web there are extremely small plants called phytoplankton.  During the brief Antarctic summer, these plants convert sunlight and chemicals into nourishment for themselves and other organisms in the food chain. The increased UV radiation has cut down the amount of nourishment the phytoplankton can produce by as much as 10%.  This directly affects all organisms that feed on phytoplankton and, indirectly, all organisms in the food web.

 

Questions

 

1.    List seven examples of electromagnetic radiation.  State two properties that all seven examples have in common.

2.    State two important differences between sound and light.

3.    Oxygen makes up about 20% of the Earth's atmosphere.  An oxygen molecule consists of two oxygen atoms.  The chemical formula for this is 02.  Copy the above information about oxygen into your book.  Write three similar sentences about ozone.

4.    Where in the Earth's atmosphere is the ozone layer found?  Why is the ozone layer so important?

5.    How is ozone formed in the Earth's atmosphere?

6.    CFCs are regarded as stable chemicals.  Explain how it is possible that such chemicals can lead to the destruction of the ozone layer.

7.    What were CFCs used for before scientists realised that they were so dangerous?

8.    Suppose that, starting today, all people stopped using CFCs and all manufacturers stopped producing them.  Would this be enough to ensure the safety of the ozone layer?  Explain your answer.

9.    Give two reasons why the hole in the ozone layer starts appearing in spring.
 

10.  Why does the ozone hole start to fill up with ozone again in late spring?
 

11.  In spring, the atmosphere above Antarctica suffers a severe depletion of ozone.  However, in the Arctic, the problem is relatively minor. Explain why this is so.

12.  Why do you think that significant ozone holes are not found over other continents as well as Antarctica?

13.  State the ways in which increased UV radiation directly affects humans.

14.  Suppose that there was a 50% reduction in the amount of ozone in the atmosphere.  Use the data given above to estimate the increase in skin cancer this might produce.

15.  Suppose that there is an increase in the amount of UV radiation reaching the Earth's surface. What precautions can we take to protect ourselves against this radiation? Also, what lifestyle changes do you think people would be prepared to accept?

16.  Explain how increased UV radiation can adversely affect fish and other creatures living in the Southern Ocean.

 

Worksheet 8.

 

Global Warming

 

Newton magazine in its September-October 2001 edition has an excellent, well-illustrated article on global warming. If possible, you should read that article. Here are some extracts from it:

 

The figures are indisputable: the 20th century saw the greatest increase in temperature of any century during the past 1000 years. The 1990s may prove to have been the warmest decade since records began and 1998 the warmest year. Moreover, there now seems little doubt that humans are contributing to this rise…

      Global warming is real and will be with us for hundreds, perhaps thousands, of years. In its Third Assessment Report on the world's climate, released in January 2001, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said our planet's average temperature will rise by between 1.4 oC and 5.8 oC over the next 100 years. The upper range represents the fastest increase in the past 10 000 years…

      The IPCC... is a joint project of the United Nations Environment Programme and the World Meteorological Organisation that brings together 2500 of the world's leading scientists and experts. When it says the world is warming, everyone should take note.

The world has been warming naturally since the end of the last ice age. What is now beyond dispute is that human beings have been contributing to the process and speeding it up, perhaps even overriding natural fluctuations that might tend to cool the planet…

Global warming is being caused by an increase in the concentration of greenhouse gases, mainly carbon dioxide and methane, in its atmosphere. These gases, together with water vapour, form an insulating blanket around the planet, trapping incoming solar energy.

 

In Antarctica, much ice is being lost. For example, in 2000 an iceberg approximately 400 kilometres long and 40 kilometres wide broke away from the Ross iceshelf. This is the largest iceberg on record.  Also in 2000, the Worldwatch Institute a US environmental group reported that ice on the Western side of the Antarctic Peninsula had decreased by about 20% from 1973 to 1993.

 

Similar problems are occurring in Arctic regions.  In August 2000 in an ice-free patch of ocean about one and a half kilometres wide was found near the North Pole by a Russian icebreaker.  Scientists believe that the last time something like this happened was 50 million years ago.  Scientists have also found that the Arctic sea ice is only 40% as thick as it was in the 1960s.

 

Global warming is evident worldwide.  The largest glacier in North America, the Bering glacier, shrank by two kilometres in the two years from 1995 to 1997.  Glacier National Park, in the US, has lost more than two-thirds of its glaciers.  The US government predicts that all the glaciers will be lost by 2030.  Mount Kilimanjaro, the highest mountain in Africa, has lost 75% of its ice cap since 1912.  All its ice could be gone within 15 years.  In South America, Venezuela has lost four of its six glacier in the last 30 years.

 

Sea levels are also rising.  Time magazine, in its April 9 2001 edition, reports: “the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse was built 460 m from the North Carolina shoreline in 1870.  By the late 1980s the ocean had crept to within 50 m and the lighthouse had to be moved to avoid collapse” and, in South America: “Brazilian shoreline in the region of Recife receded about 2 m a year from 1915 to 1950 and more than 2.5 m a year from 1985 to 1995”.  In the Pacific, Lonely Planet reports: “a rise in the ocean levels of 30 cm or 50 cm would spell the disappearance of entire Polynesian island-states”. In the Indian Ocean, rising oceans also threaten the Maldives. The highest point is just 3 m above sea level and about 80% of the country is less than 1 m above sea level. The government has built a 1.8 m high concrete wall for protection. There is also a plan to build an artificial island for up to half the country's population.

 

Carbon dioxide is the major contributor to global warming. Carbon dioxide in the atmosphere of Venus is the reason why Venus is much hotter than Mercury even though Mercury is much closer to the Sun. On Earth, carbon dioxide is responsible for about half of the greenhouse effect. Carbon dioxide is produced when fossil fuels are burned. However, even though world use of fossil fuels levelled off in the 1980s (due to more efficient cars and increasing use of nuclear energy) carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere continue to rise. Joel Levine, a scientist at NASA and a professor of physics, led a group of scientists who tried to solve this puzzle. They studied over 40 000 spy satellite pictures taken of the Earth at night. They found large numbers of man-made fires. In fact, they were very surprised to find that about 1% of the Earth's surface area burns each year. In Africa, frequently farmland was burned two or three times each year. In Siberia, forests were being burned down for urban development. In Brazil much land was being cleared by burning too. About 30% of the world's tropical forests have been destroyed by burning, primarily in the last 30 years. When trees and other plants are burned, many other gases are produced too. Often these gases are also bad for our atmosphere. One such example is methyl bromide: one of these molecules in the stratosphere can destroy 2 million ozone molecules!

 

Industry, through burning fossil fuels, produces carbon dioxide. Agriculture, through activities such as cattle farming and rice growing, produces methane, another greenhouse gas. In order to measure greenhouse gases at a global level, scientists need to operate a long way away from industry and farming. It was for this reason that the US chose the South Pole for global measurements of carbon dioxide in 1956. This scientific research is still going on today. The South Pole is also the ideal place for finding out about atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations in the past. In Antarctica, falling snow traps air. As more snow falls, the pressure on lower layers turns the snow into ice. By drilling into the ice, scientists can find out about the composition of the Earth's atmosphere in the past. The deepest holes have been drilled to more of than 3 km depth. Since drilling proceeds at about 10 m to 20 m a day, such drilling can take years. However, the lowest layers can give us information about the state of the atmosphere 300 000 years ago. This sort of research has shown us that the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has risen from about 280 parts per million (ppm) before industrialisation to its current figure of about 360 ppm. The amount of methane has more than doubled in the past 200 years. Prior to industrialisation, the levels of these greenhouse gases were quite stable.

     

Here is another quote from the Time magazine mentioned earlier:

 

In the short run, there is not much chance of halting global warming, not even if every nation in the world ratifies the Kyoto Protocol tomorrow. The treaty doesn't require reductions in carbon dioxide emissions until 2008. By that time, a great deal of damage will already have been done. But we can slow things down... Humanity embarked unknowingly on the dangerous experiment of tinkering with the climate of our planet. Now that we know what we're doing, it would be utterly foolish to continue.

 

Questions

 

1.    What is global warming? What are the two main gases involved in global warming?

 

2.    Explain how human activity has led to an increase in the concentration of each of the two main global warming gases.

 

3.   Choose four different places on the Earth. State how each of these four places has suffered a decrease in ice in recent years.

 

4.   Global warming is likely to lead to an increase in the height of the oceans. Name three countries that are likely to be particularly badly affected by this. Also name three countries that are unlikely to be directly affected much by increased ocean height.

 

5.   A number of countries will not be directly affected by an increase in ocean height. However, these countries could be affected by global warming in other ways. Climate change is one such way. For example, England and Wales, towards the end of 2000, were subject to particularly heavy rain. The last three months of 2000 became Britain's wettest three-month period ever recorded. Describe two other always in which countries could be affected by a global warming other than increased ocean height and extreme weather conditions.

 

6.    Burning forests is particularly bad for global warming. But even chopping down forests is bad for global warming. Explain why this is.

 

7.    How can Antarctic ice help scientists find out about the history of the Earth's atmosphere? State some facts that scientists have established after a study of Antarctic ice.

 

8.    Why do scientists who wish to find out about global warming consider it very important to do research in Antarctica? You should give two reasons for this.

 

9.    Carbon dioxide dissolves in water. However, as water heats up, less carbon dioxide can be dissolved in it. Some parts of the Earth's oceans are saturated with carbon dioxide now. This means that they cannot dissolve any more carbon dioxide. Explain what happens as these oceans heat up and how this will affect the rate of global warming.

 

10.  What is the Kyoto Protocol? Why is it important? What is New Zealand’s stance on this Protocol?

 

11. Pick one country with which you are familiar. Explain how a temperature increase of 5 oC would affect plant, animal and human life in this country.

 

 

Worksheet 9.

 

The Dry Valleys

 

 

Scientists believe that, about five hundred million years ago, the landmasses of Antarctica, Australia India, Africa and South America were all together. They formed the giant and ancient land mass called Gondwana. Furthermore, scientists believe that at this time Antarctica was near the equator.  In order to justify these claims, scientists need to find matching rock formations and fossils in these separate landmasses.  In fact, the name Gondwana comes from a region in central India occupied by the Gond people.  In this region fossil strata resembling those from the other landmasses have been found.  Scientists also look at the shapes of the landmasses to see how well they can fit together, like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle.  The pieces do in fact fit together very well, particularly if we consider the shapes of the continental shelves about 1000 metres below sea level.

 

It is very difficult for scientists to study rocks, minerals and fossils in much of Antarctica because 98% of the Continent is covered with a thick layer of ice.  The areas in Antarctica without ice are called oases.  These oases will be of particular interest to scientists who want to study rock and fossil formations.  The largest of these oases are the Dry Valleys. The Dry Valleys are also conveniently near to the research centres of Scott Base and McMurdo Station. 

 

The valleys were formed by glaciers cutting their way from the east Antarctic ice sheet through the Transantarctic Mountains to the sea.  This mountain range is one of the world's great mountain chains: it has a length of more than 2200 kilometres, and many of its peaks exceed 4000 metres in height, even though much of the range is buried in ice.  During the past thirty million years this mountain range has continued to rise as a result of the coming together of two large landmasses.  In some places the mountain range has been rising faster than the glaciers have been able to cut down through it.  Thus, some glaciers have been prevented from following their historic roots and the dry valleys are the result.  However, the mountain range is no barrier to strong and extremely dry winds that come from the great East Antarctic Ice Sheet.  These winds are so dry that they tend to remove any moisture that is in the Dry Valleys.  Adding to the dryness of these valleys is the fact that there has been no rain in them for it least two million and possibly four million years.

 

The first of the Dry Valleys was discovered in 1903 by the explorer and adventurer Robert Scott. In fact he and two others discovered it by accident: after visiting the East Antarctic Ice Sheet they became lost in a thick cloud and went into the wrong valley. In The Voyage of the Discovery Scott described it as follows:

 

I cannot but think that this valley is a very wonderful place. We have seen today all the indications of colossal ice action and considerable water action, and yet neither of these agents is now at work. It is worthy of record, too, that we have seen no living thing, not even a moss or a lichen; all that we did find, far inland amongst the moraine heaps, was the skeleton of a Weddell seal, and how that came there is beyond guessing. It is certainly a valley of the dead; even the great glacier which once pushed through it has withered away.

 

It turns out that the Dry Valleys are not without life, although the life they do contain is very unusual and hard to find.  In 1976, biologists found algae, bacteria and fungi growing inside rocks in the valleys.  The rocks actually protect the organisms against harmful radiation and loss of too much moisture.  The rocks in question were porous enough to allow some light, carbon dioxide and moisture to penetrate.  Some of the plants found were believed to be 200 000 years old.  Lake Hoare, in Taylor Valley, was found to have a dense covering of blue-green algae on its bottom, even though the lake is always covered with a layer of ice more than five metres thick!

 

Mummified seals have been found as far as forty kilometres inland, a long way from the sea for a creature suited largely to swimming.  The extremely cold and dry conditions can effectively freeze-dry seals and penguins.  Their carcasses are then slowly eroded by the wind.  Fossilised coniferous tree-trunks have also been found high up on ledges in the Dry Valleys.

 

The glaciers that formed the Dry Valleys cut so deep into the earth that they exposed rock layers at least 500 million years old.  These rocks are still exposed today.  The yellow sandstones contain thick coal layers and plant and animal fossils.  The fossils include freshwater fish, amphibians and reptiles.  Similar rocks and fossils have been found in Africa and India, supporting the Gondwana theory.

 

The Dry Valleys of Antarctica have also helped scientists gain extra-terrestrial knowledge.  NASA judged the valleys to be the nearest equivalent on Earth to the terrain of Mars and so performed extensive research in the valleys in the mid-Seventies before sending the Viking Lander spacecraft to Mars.  Meteorites falling on Antarctica are usually trapped in the ice and move with the ice towards the coast.  Where the ice flow meets a barrier such as a mountain range, the wind scours away the ice and reveals the meteorites.  This happens near the Dry Valleys where, in the last 25 years, several thousand meteorite fragments have been found.

 

Questions

 

1.    How were the Dry Valleys formed?

 

2.    Give two reasons why the Dry Valleys are so dry.

 

3.    Why are they so important for geologists?

 

4.    What was Gondwana?

 

5.    List three types of evidence that scientists could give in support of the existence of Gondwana.

 

6.    Some mountains are produced by volcanic action. Give another way in which mountain ranges can be produced.

 

7.  In Antarctica, what is an oasis? In the middle of the 20th century, several oases were discovered in Antarctica. By what means do you think they were discovered?

 

8.    In the dry valleys, some plants have been found living inside rocks. Give reasons why it would be better for and the plants to live inside the rocks have than on the surface of the rocks.

 

9.   The most abundant life in the Dry Valleys is to be found in lakes. Give reasons why you would expect more life in the lakes than out of them.

 

10.  How old are the oldest exposed rocks in the Dry Valleys?

 

11.  These rocks were exposed by glacial action. There are many glaciers and rivers in the world, and yet in very few of these places are such old rocks exposed. Why is it so rare for rocks of this age to be exposed elsewhere in the world?

 

12.  NASA chose to carry out research in the Dry Valleys because they were the best approximation on Earth to the environment of Mars. Give three features of the Dry Valleys that make them similar to Mars.

 

13.  There would also have been some disadvantages for NASA in using the Dry Valleys in this way. Explain these disadvantages.

 

14.  Why have so many meteorite fragments been found near the Dry Valleys?

 

15.  Don Juan Pond, in Wright Valley, is only 10 cm deep. It is so salty that it never freezes, even when the temperature gets as low as -50o C. Why do you think this lake is so salty?

 

16.  The Lonely Planet Guide to Antarctica, in its section on the Dry Valleys, states that "tourists generally fly by helicopter into Taylor Valley, the most accessible from the Ross Sea. Large sections of the others are protected areas under the Antarctic Treaty, and access is restricted or forbidden, even to scientists." Why do you think the decision has been made to restrict access to the Dry Valleys so much?

 

 

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