NASA scientists conducting surveys of arctic ice sheets in Greenland got an unprecedented view of an abandoned “city under the ice” built by the U.S. military during the Cold War.

During a scientific flight in April 2024, a NASA Gulfstream III aircraft flew over the Greenland Ice Sheet carrying radar instruments to map the depth of the ice sheet and the layers of bedrock below it. The images revealed a new view of Camp Century, a Cold War-era U.S. military base consisting of a series of tunnels carved directly into the ice sheet.

As it turns out, this abandoned “secret city” was the site of a secret Cold War project known as Project Iceworm which called for the construction of 2,500 miles (4,023 km) of tunnels that could be used to nuclear intermediate range ballistic missiles (IRBMs) at the Soviet Union.

“We were looking for the bed of the ice and out pops Camp Century. We didn’t know what it was at first,” said NASA’s Chad Greene, a cryospheric scientist at the agency’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), in an agency statement. “In the new data, individual structures in the secret city are visible in a way that they’ve never been seen before.”

A synthetic aperture radar (SAR) image of Camp Century in Greenland, captured by a NASA Gulfstream III aircraft in April 2024. (Image credit: NASA)

Construction on Camp Century began in 1959, but the base was abandoned in 1967 due to the costs and challenges of keeping the tunnels from collapsing in the ever-shifting ice sheet.

Project Iceworm sought to use Northern Greenland as a launch site due to its proximity to the Soviet Union and because of the remoteness of the location, according to the 2007 article “The Iceman that Never Came” published in The Scandinavian Journal of History. “The key concept was to deploy the missile force in ‘thousands of miles of cut-and-cover tunnels’, or rather covered trenches, whose floor would lie 28 feet beneath the surface,” the article states.

a crane on the left lowers a ribbed pipe on the right, attached with a large hook, lowing into an open section of embedded structure in the snow.

A crane lowers a hatch into a trench at Camp Century in Greenland. (Image credit: US Army/Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos/Getty Images)

The trenches were designed for a type of modified Minuteman IRBM missile known as “Iceman” that would be able to withstand the pressures of launching through the ice sheet. Project Iceworm was ultimately canceled and abandoned along with Camp Century, but the echoes of this era of the Cold War still reverberate throughout the Greenland landscape today.

A view of the main trench to the permanent camp at Century Camp, Greenland. (Image credit: Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos/Getty Images)

Weapons, sewage, fuel and other contaminants were buried at Camp Century when it was abandoned, but the thawing Greenland Ice Sheet threatens to unbury these dangerous relics. The U.S. government even issued a statement in 2017, saying it “acknowledges the reality of climate change and the risk it poses” and will “work with the Danish government and the Greenland authorities to settle questions of mutual security” over Camp Century.

U.S. Army personnel place a truss at Century Camp, Greenland. (Image credit: Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos/Getty Images)

For now, though, Camp Century helps to serve as a warning and a signpost from which scientists can measure how our changing climate is affecting areas like the Greenland ice sheet. “Without detailed knowledge of ice thickness, it is impossible to know how the ice sheets will respond to rapidly warming oceans and atmosphere, greatly limiting our ability to project rates of sea level rise,” said JPL cryospheric scientist Alex Gardner in NASA’s statement.

US Army Colonel, Walter H. Parsons (centre), chief of the Snow, Ice and Permafrost Research Establishment (SIPRE), and visitors climb up to an escape hatch to enter Camp Century, an Arctic United States military scientific research base in Greenland, June 1959. (Image credit: US Army/Pictorial Parade/Archive Photos/Getty Images)

NASA plans to use the data collected by the campaign to inform future studies of Earth’s large ice sheets.

The flights were conducted out of Pituffik Space Base, formerly Thule Air Force Base. The Space Force base is now the U.S. military’s northernmost installation and supports missile warning, missile defense and space surveillance missions.

Originally posted on Space.com.

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