Long-outstanding blood falls mystery of Antarctic finally solved
A bright red waterfall bursting out of eternal ice, right in the middle of one of the coldest regions on Earth: Blood Falls are among the most mysterious natural phenomena in Antarctica. For a long time, it was assumed that red algae were responsible for the striking color. A new study has now brought clarity and paints a completely different picture. Scientists have linked a sudden burst of rust-red water at Antarctica’s Blood Falls to a measurable drop in the glacier sitting above it. This connection shows the red flow is not just a surface stain, but a visible signal of pressure changes and hidden water movement deep beneath the ice. Blood Falls were discovered in 1911 by the Australian geologist Griffith Taylor, a participant in the Terra Nova Expedition. He was the first to explore the valley which now bears his name. At the time, he attributed the red color to red algae. It was later proven, however, that the coloration is caused by iron oxides. It is located in the Antarctic Dry Valleys, one of the driest and coldest landscapes on Earth. The average temperature here is around minus 17 degrees Celsius conditions under which liquid water should hardly be able to exist. This made the long-standing mystery all the greater: why does liquid continuously flow out of cracks in the glacier? Imaging techniques provided the crucial explanation. Beneath the glacier lies a complex network of subglacial rivers and an underground lake. The water there is a highly concentrated brine, extremely salty and rich in iron.
In September 2018, a tracker on Taylor Glacier, a massive river of ice flowing through Antarctica’s McMurdo Dry Valleys, recorded a drop as a camera caught Blood Falls turning on. Peter T. Doran, a geoscientist at Louisiana State University (LSU) matched the drop to the outflow and linked it to lower pressure. Over weeks, his team saw the surface sink, then recover, suggesting a short-lived drainage pulse under the glacier. Limited coverage left gaps, so future monitoring must track more sites to reveal how often the glacier vents. At roughly 60 feet (18 meters) deep, lake water cooled by as much as 2.7°F (1.5°C). Dense brine can slip into the lake at the depth where its weight matches surrounding water, then spreads outward. This injection disturbed stratification, stable layers which keep lake water from mixing, and it likely moved nutrients sideways. Life in Antarctica’s Dry Valleys lakes sits in tight bands, so even small jolts can change who gets food and energy. Salt turns ordinary water into a chemical mix which resists freezing, even when air temperatures stay far below freezing. Researchers call that mix brine, salt-heavy water that stays liquid in deep cold, and Blood Falls carries it to daylight. Over hundreds and even thousands of years, repeated freezing can concentrate salts, leaving a liquid which keeps moving through the ice. These salts likely come from hidden rock and deposits, and their chemistry offers clues about what lies under Taylor Glacier.
Using modern radar technology, researchers examined the layers of ice which feed the waterfall. The results showed that the blood-red color does not come from biological material, but from extremely salty, iron-rich water hidden beneath the ice. For a long time, it was a mystery why liquid continuously emerges from cracks in the glacier. Pressure builds when heavy ice traps salty water beneath it, and the glacier cannot hold that squeeze forever. At Blood Falls, the liquid comes from subglacial channels located under a glacier and sealed from air that can open during ice motion. Weight and slow creep of the ice can push the salty mix toward cracks, where it escapes in sudden pulses. The pulses stay hard to predict, since small changes in stress or blockage can delay a release for months. Earlier, explorers logged the red seep at the glacier face, and an Antarctic protection plan still guards the site. Once the liquid meets air, oxidation, iron reacting with oxygen and turning rust-red, changes the color within minutes. Tiny iron particles form in the salty water underground, then stain the ice as the flow spreads downslope. That fast color change makes each discharge easy to spot, which helps scientists track when the hidden system opens.
The mystery at the Taylor Glacier is well documented. A 0.6-inch drop in the glacier surface arrived with nearly a 10% slowdown in its forward motion. Draining water reduces pressure at the base, so the ice presses harder on rock and moves less easily. “These observations demonstrate that an extended brine discharge event, characterized by episodic pulses of brine sourced from beneath Taylor Glacier over one month, reduces subglacial water pressure, which lowers the surface and reduces ice velocity,” wrote Doran. Later measurements suggested the ice stayed a bit slower than before, but only longer records can confirm lasting change. The special chemical composition explains several mysteries at once. Saltwater has a significantly lower freezing point than freshwater. In addition, it releases heat when it freezes. This so-called latent heat of fusion causes the surrounding ice to partially melt, allowing the water to continue flowing even under extreme subzero temperatures. When the iron-rich brine reaches the surface and reacts with oxygen, the iron oxidizes. The water turns a rusty red, giving Blood Falls their blood-like appearance.
Blood Falls are located at the end of the retreating Taylor Glacier. Daily camera frames of an ice-covered Antarctic lake, showed fresh staining starting 19 Sep, 2018, and the stain area expanded. Meanwhile, a lake thermistor, a tiny sensor that measures temperature changes, detected a temperature dip at depth during the same discharge. In their report, the authors wrote that the serendipitous recording of three different datasets provided a rare, coherent signal of a subglacial brine drainage event. Only a short window produced this record, yet it captured how fast the system can change once it starts. From the air, an airborne sensor detected deep salty water below the valley floor, far from any melt. Signals from that tool pointed to groundwater pathways at least three miles (4.8 km's) long, meaning the brine can travel through rock before entering ice. Later work used ice-penetrating radar to trace brine channels inside the glacier itself, across several miles of ice. The maps helped explain why outflow can appear at one crack while other brine slips quietly into the lake.
Measurements also showed that the closer the water gets to the waterfall, the higher the concentration of iron-rich brine becomes. A relationship between water temperature and salt content was also identified. Cracks of varying sizes in the ice act as channels through which the brine rises, melts ice and becomes further concentrated. Deep in the brine, microbes survived on iron and sulfur chemistry, even after long isolation under ice. Instead of breathing oxygen, many of them likely used dissolved minerals as fuel, which keeps the system alive in darkness. Geologists estimate the reservoir became trapped between three and five million years ago, making it one of the valley’s oldest liquids. Strict rules limit access and keep most sampling tightly controlled, since outsiders can contaminate such a closed habitat. Blood Falls now looks less like a strange stain and more like a pressure release point linking ice, rock and lake. Future field seasons may add wider sensor networks, and LSU could then test whether warming trends change how often the system vents. The Taylor Glacier is thus considered the coldest known glacier on Earth in which water flows permanently. What looks like a bloody fissure in the ice is, in reality, a fascinating example of how complex and dynamic even the most extreme regions of our planet can be.
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