Scientists have made a remarkable hidden basin discovery beneath East Antarctica’s ice sheet in 2026.
A giant fan-shaped network of about 30 connected basins was found, revealing a vast hidden geological structure.
What the East Antarctica Hidden Basin Discovery Revealed
The study published in Nature Geoscience on June 3, 2026, names it the East Antarctic Fan-shaped Basin Province.
The discovery links several of Antarctica’s best-known hidden features into one enormous geological formation.
The province includes the Wilkes Basin, the Aurora Basin, and the basin containing Lake Vostok.
Lake Vostok is the largest known subglacial lake on Earth, buried under roughly 4 kilometers of ice.
Read the full peer-reviewed findings at Nature Geoscience study on Antarctica basins published in Nature Geoscience this year.
How Scientists Found the Hidden Basins Under Antarctica’s Ice
Researchers used radar surveys flown over the ice sheet to map the bedrock hidden beneath kilometers of ice.
Radar pulses penetrate the ice and reflect off the rock below, creating detailed images of the hidden terrain.
By combining multiple radar surveys, scientists assembled a continent-wide picture of the subglacial landscape.
The fan-shaped pattern of basins only became clear when all the survey data was merged into a single map.
More details on the discovery and methods used are covered at ScienceDaily report on Antarctica discovery with accessible science reporting.
What Caused the East Antarctica Basin Province to Form
Scientists believe the fan-shaped structure formed through a process called distributed rotational extension.
This occurs when continental crust gradually stretches outward from a central point, creating triangular basins.
The process is similar to spreading fingers apart, with spaces between them forming the basin shapes.
The formation is linked to multiple tectonic episodes tied to the breakup of ancient supercontinent Gondwana.
It may also relate to the later separation of Antarctica and Australia over millions of years of drift.
The East Antarctic Fan-shaped Basin Province may be one of the largest rotational extension zones ever found.
Why the Antarctica Hidden Basin Discovery Matters for Ice Science
The shape of bedrock beneath the ice controls how ice sheets flow and where subglacial lakes form.
Understanding the hidden basin structure could help scientists predict how East Antarctica responds to warming.
Parts of East Antarctica overlying the newly mapped basins may be more vulnerable to ice loss than expected.
Better knowledge of the bedrock helps climate models produce more accurate sea level rise projections globally.
Some of the basins in the province sit beneath regions of the ice sheet already identified as unstable.
Knowing the full extent of the hidden basin network allows scientists to prioritize monitoring of vulnerable zones.
The findings will also help improve ice sheet models used to project long-term contributions to sea level rise.
AI-based analysis tools like those discussed in our guide on AI tools used in scientific research analysis are increasingly used in polar research.
Science writers covering this discovery can find useful tips in our post on AI-powered writing for science reporting.
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