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Gravity increase at the south pole

January 1, 1967

Abstract. Measurements made between December 1957 and January 1966 of the gravity difference between the McMurdo Sound pendulum station, which is on bedrock, and the South Pole station, which is on the Antarctic ice sheet, show a gravity increase at the South Pole of 0.11 milligals per year. The most likely hypothesis for the increase is that it was caused by ice flowing downslope across a gravity gradient and by the sinking of the South Pole station as a result of accumulation of ice. An alternate hypothesis that the gravity increase was caused by a decrease in ice thickness, of about 40 centimeters per year, is theoretically possible but is not supported by direct evidence.

Publication Year 1967
Title Gravity increase at the south pole
Authors John C. Behrendt
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Science
Index ID 70011494
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse