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A massive wall of ice protects the Seven Kingdoms from the dangers of the wintry north in HBO’s hit series Game of Thrones.
But in the real world, an ice structure standing at half the height of
the Empire State Building would face more problems from physics than any
wildlings or White Walkers lurking in the lands Beyond the Wall.
The mighty Wall has little to fear from science in the medieval fantasy world of Game of Thrones
— human hands got some help from magic to build the icy barrier up to
its massive height of 700 feet across a distance of 300 miles. A similar
touch of magic would be needed to keep the Wall standing in real life,
scientists say. Otherwise gravity’s irresistible force would eventually
bring it down.
“Even at very cold temperatures, large ice masses deform under their
own weight,” said engineer Mary Albert of the Ice Drilling Program
Office at Dartmouth College. “And over long time scales, ice flows, so
it would not hold its original shape for thousands of years.”
The idea for the fantastical fortification came to George R.R. Martin, author of the A Song of Ice and Fire books that inspired the HBO TV show, when he stood on Hadrian’s Wall,
which was built by the Roman Empire. Martin envisioned his much bigger
Wall as a towering defensive structure that would dwarf real-life
versions such as Hadrian’s Wall (15 feet tall) and the Great Wall of
China (30 feet tall).
Only Mother Nature has built real-life ice structures rivaling the
Wall, such as the Greenland and Antarctic Ice Sheets, which are several
miles thick. Such ice structures formed over “hundreds of thousands of
years of snow falling in very cold locations where there is not melt,”
Albert said.
Humans have only managed to erect a few “ice palaces” for special
events over the past few centuries by cutting ice into transportable
blocks and stacking them.
“If the temperature always remains well below the freezing
temperature where ice is a solid, it can and has been used as a
construction material, though on much smaller scales than the ice wall
mentioned here,” Albert said.
An attempt to build something on the scale of the huge Wall as envisioned in Game of Thrones
would be a race against time. Even at sub-zero temperatures, the icy
Wall would begin to “flow” and deform like a fluid over time under the
pressure of its own weight, said glaciologist Bob Hawley of Dartmouth
College. The lowermost parts of the Wall would end up bulging outward as
the uppermost parts pushed down, similar to how a glacier flows
downhill.
“Try making a post out of Silly Putty and leaving it for an hour, and you will get the picture,” Hawley said.
Human engineers might get around this problem by building the Wall as
a sloping ridge rather than a vertical fortification, said physicist
Martin Truffer of the University of Alaska Fairbanks.
“You would need a slope of at least 1 to 20 to stop significant
deformation,” Truffer said. “So to keep it 700 feet high, I would
estimate that wall to be about 40 times that in width.”
The problem with such shallow slopes is that they wouldn’t work well in keeping out human or supernatural invaders.
A vertical ice Wall has other advantages too. Because ice is very
absorptive, the Wall would be “awesome in terms of defensibility,”
Truffer said.
The huge ice structure could easily hold its own against the medieval-era technology and weapons found in Game of Thrones,
the experts agreed. Such a barrier would force most attackers to resort
to targeting the weak points — heavily fortified tunnels — or attempt
the slippery climb up the vertical ice face using ice axes and crampons.
“While its structural integrity is intact, it would be a formidable
barrier, since it is thick enough so that handheld projectiles or even
artillery fire would not penetrate it,” Albert said. “Although prolonged
bombardment by today’s larger explosives and weapons would eventually
be able to break it down.”
Of course, even the magic-strengthened Wall in Game of Thrones might end up in hot water if it went head-to-head against a fire-breathing dragon or perhaps the fictional napalm-like wildfire.
But whether or not an experiment of ice and fire plays out in the
fictional series, science dictates that gravity will always win.
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