King Baudouin Ice Shelf
The King Baudouin Ice Shelf in Dronning Maud Land, East Antarctica, is within the Norwegian part of Antarctica. It is named after King Baudouin of Belgium.
Geology
The King Baudouin ice shelf is confined by two ice rises and one under-ice pinning-point with a width of only a few kilometres; the latter seems to define the seaward edge of the ice shelf and impacts ice flow in the hinterland.Roi Baudoin Base
Belgium was one of the original 12 signatories of the Antarctic Treaty. It established its Roi Baudoin Base scientific research station on the ice shelf in 1958, built for the International Geophysical Year, and decommissioned in 1967. This operated over several three year cycles: 1958–1961 and 1964–1966.Study
The ice shelf is being actively studied by Belgian Antarctic Program scientists from the Princess Elisabeth Base. This includes:- BELARE, with a GPS position reference tweeting position and rate of movement, and ice depth measurements;
- Be:Wise, examining the ice dynamics where the shelf is grounded, and which buttress the ice flow from the East Antarctic ice sheet.