Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-j824f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T22:18:22.577Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Human occupation, impacts and environmental management of Bunger Hills

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 February 2020

Damian B. Gore*
Affiliation:
Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Macquarie University, NSW2109, Australia
John A.E. Gibson
Affiliation:
27A Rialannah Rd, Mt Nelson, TAS7007, Australia
Michelle R. Leishman
Affiliation:
Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, NSW2109, Australia

Abstract

The types and distributions of anthropogenic rubbish have been documented at Bunger Hills, East Antarctica. The area has been the site of scientific research stations from 1958 to the present. Rubbish types include deliberately or negligently discarded items (gas cylinders, broken glass), abandoned unserviceable equipment (boats, vehicles, scientific equipment), spills (chemicals, fuel, oil) and the slow collapse of old buildings. Some rubbish remained where it was left, while other material was redistributed by strong winds. Modern expeditioner training should limit the production of new rubbish, while inadvertent wind dispersal of rubbish from old station buildings could be minimized by better management of these structures and their surrounds. Buildings and other constructed items need ongoing maintenance if they are not to break down and be distributed by wind, or they should be removed within a reasonable period.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Antarctic Science Ltd 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alberts, F.G. & Blodgett, H.G. 1956. The Bunger Hills area of Antarctica. The Professional Geographer, 8, 10.1111/j.0033-0124.1956.83_13.x.Google Scholar
Avsyuk, G.A., Markov, K.K. & Shumsky, P.A. 1956. Geographical observations in an Antarctic ‘Oasis’. USSR Academy of Sciences, Moscow; a translation from Avsyuk et al. 1956. Publication of Soviet Geographical Society, 88, 316350.Google Scholar
Ayres, E., Nkem, J.N., Wall, D.H., Adams, B.J., Broos, E.J., Parsons, A.N., et al. 2008. Effects of human trampling on populations of soil fauna in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica. Conservation Biology, 22, 15441551.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Barker, R.J. 1977. A biological reconnaissance of the Bunger Hills (March 1977). Australian Antarctic Division Technical Memorandum 67. Retrieved from https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/Biology_Bunger_Hills_1977 (accessed 7 February 2019).Google Scholar
Brooks, S.T., Jabour, J. & Bergstrom, D.M. 2018. What is ‘footprint’ in Antarctica: proposing a set of definitions. Antarctic Science, 30, 227235.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Byrd, R.E. 1947. Our navy explores Antarctica. National Geographic Magazine, 92, 429522.Google Scholar
Chwedorzewska, K., Korczak-Abshire, M., Olech, M., Lityńska-Zając, M. & Augustyniuk-Kram, A. 2013. Alien invertebrates transported accidentally to the Polish Antarctic Station in cargo and on fresh foods. Polish Polar Research, 34, 5566.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Doran, P.T., McKay, C.P., Meyer, M.A., Andersen, D.T., Wharton, R.A. & Hastings, J.T. 1996. Climatology and implications for perennial lake ice occurrence at Bunger Hills Oasis, East Antarctica. Antarctic Science, 8, 289296.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dubrovin, L.I. & Zalevskii, M. 1969. Tides in the inlets of the Bunger Hills. Soviet Antarctic Expedition Information Bulletin, 7, 2023.Google Scholar
Filcek, K. & Zielinski, K. 1990. Report on the expedition of Polish biologists to Bunger Hills, East Antarctica, 1988/89. Polish Polar Research, 11, 161167.Google Scholar
Frenot, Y., Chown, S.L., Whinam, J., Selkirk, P.M., Convey, P., Skotnicki, M. & Bergstrom, D.M. 2005. Biological invasions in the Antarctic: extent, impacts and implications. Biological Reviews, 80, 4572.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gibson, J.A.E. 2000. The environment of the Bunger Hills. Australian Antarctic Division. Retrieved from https://data.aad.gov.au/eds/file/2090 (accessed 1 February 2019).Google Scholar
Gibson, J.A.E., Gore, D.B. & Kaup, E. 2002. Algae River: an extensive drainage system in the Bunger Hills, East Antarctica. Polar Record, 38, 141152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gore, D.B. & Leishman, M.R. 2020. Tafoni show postglacial and modern wind azimuths are similar at Bunger Hills. Antarctic Science, 31, 10.1017/S095410201900035X.Google Scholar
Gore, D.B., Revill, A.T. & Guille, D. 1999. Petroleum hydrocarbons ten years after spillage at a helipad in Bunger Hills, East Antarctica. Antarctic Science, 11, 428430.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gregorczuk, M. 1980. Climate of Bunger Oasis, (region of A.B. Dobrowolski Station, Antarctica). Polish Polar Research, 1, 205230.Google Scholar
Hale, R.C., Kim, S.L., Harvey, E., La Guardia, M.J., Mainor, T.M., Bush, E.O. & Jacobs, E.M. 2008. Antarctic research bases: local sources of polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) flame retardants. Environmental Science and Technology, 42, 14521457.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hughes, K.A. & Nobbs, S.J. 2004. Long-term survival of human faecal microorganisms on the Antarctic Peninsula. Antarctic Science, 16, 293297.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaup, E., Haendel, D. & Vaikmae, R. 1993. Limnological features of the saline lakes of the Bunger Hills (Wilkes Land, Antarctica). Antarctic Science, 5, 4150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kiernan, K. & McConnell, A. 2001. Impacts of geoscience research on the physical environment of the Vestfold Hills, Antarctica. Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, 48, 767776.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klokov, V., Kaup, E., Zierath, R. & Haendel, D. 1990. Lakes of the Bunger Hills (East Antarctica): chemical and ecological properties. Polish Polar Research, 11, 147159.Google Scholar
Krzeminski, W. & Wisniewski, E. 1985. Polish expedition to the A.B. Dobrowolski Station on the Antarctic continent in 1978–1979. Polish Polar Research, 6, 377384.Google Scholar
Leishman, M.R., Gibson, J.A.E. & Gore, D.B. 2020. Spatial distribution of birds and terrestrial plants of Bunger Hills. Antarctic Science, 31, 10.1017/S0954102020000012.Google Scholar
Madrid Protocol. 1991. The Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty. Retrieved from https://www.ats.aq/e/ep.htm (accessed 13 February 2019).Google Scholar
Melles, M., Kulbe, T., Overduin, P.P. & Verkulich, S. 1994. The expedition BUNGER OASIS 1993/94 of the AWI Research Unit Potsdam. In Melles, M., ed. The expeditions NORILSK/TAYMYR 1993 and BUNGER OASIS 1993/94 of the AWI Research Unit Potsdam. Reports on Polar Research 148. Bremerhaven: Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, 2980.Google Scholar
Nudel'man, A.V. 1966. Soviet Antarctic expeditions, 1955–1959. Jerusalem: Israel Program for Scientific Translations. 138 pp.Google Scholar
O'Neill, T.A., Balks, M.R., López-Martίnez, J. & McWhirter, J.L. 2012. A method for assessing the physical recovery of Antarctic desert pavements following human-induced disturbances: a case study in the Ross Sea region of Antarctica. Journal of Environmental Management, 112, 415428.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
O'Neill, T.A., Balks, M.R. & López-Martίnez, J. 2013. Visual recovery of desert pavement surfaces following impacts from vehicle and foot traffic in the Ross Sea region of Antarctica. Antarctic Science, 25, 514530.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pertierra, L.R., Hughes, K.A., Benayas, J., Justel, A. & Quesada, A. 2013a. Environmental management of a scientific field camp in Maritime Antarctica: reconciling research impacts with conservation goals in remote ice-free areas. Antarctic Science, 25, 307317.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pertierra, L.R., Lara, F., Tejedo, P., Quesada, A. & Benayas, J. 2013b. Rapid denudation processes in cryptogamic communities from Maritime Antarctica subjected to human trampling. Antarctic Science, 25, 318328.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peter, H.-U., Braun, C., Janowski, S., Nordt, A., Nordt, A. & Stelter, M. 2013. The current environmental situation and proposals for the management of the Fildes Peninsula Region. Retrieved from https://www.umweltbundesamt.de/sites/default/files/medien/461/publikationen/4424.pdf (accessed 27 May 2019).Google Scholar
Poland, J.S., Mitchell, S. & Rutter, A. 2001. Remediation of former military bases in the Canadian Arctic. Cold Regions Science and Technology, 32, 93105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Power, M.L., Samuel, A., Smith, J.J., Stark, J.S., Gillings, M.R. & Gordon, D.M. 2016. Escherichia coli out in the cold: dissemination of human-derived bacteria into the Antarctic microbiome. Environmental Pollution, 215, 5865.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shabad, T. 1985. New Soviet Antarctic station is planned. Polar Geography and Geology, 9, 165.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stark, J.S., Corbett, P.A., Dunshea, G., Johnstone, G., King, C., Mondon, J.A., Power, M.L., et al. 2016. The environmental impact of sewage and wastewater outfalls in Antarctica: an example from Davis station, East Antarctica. Water Research, 105, 602614.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Verkulich, S. & Melles, M. 1992. Composition and paleoenvironmental implications of sediments in a fresh water lake and in marine basins of the Bunger Hills, East Antarctica. Polarforschung, 60, 169180.Google Scholar
Wild, S., McLagan, D., Schlabach, M., Bossi, R., Hawker, D., Cropp, R., King, C.L., et al. 2015. An Antarctic Research Station as a source of brominated and perfluorinated persistent organic pollutants to the local environment. Environmental Science and Technology, 49, 103112.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Supplementary material: File

Gore et al. supplementary material

Gore et al. supplementary material
Download Gore et al. supplementary material(File)
File 95.2 KB