Current:Home > MyAmerican scientists explore Antarctica for oldest-ever ice to help understand climate change -FinanceMind
American scientists explore Antarctica for oldest-ever ice to help understand climate change
View
Date:2025-04-17 22:23:50
They're braving some of the highest, driest, coldest and windiest conditions on the planet, but American scientists in Antarctica believe the effort is worth it. They're searching for a sample of the oldest ice ever found, which could help us better understand climate change.
The expedition to Antarctica is part of COLDEX, a federally funded collaboration of American universities and science organizations. For the team carrying out this work near the South Pole, it means camping on the ice without showers or flushing toilets for seven weeks.
Once researchers collect ice samples, scientists back in the U.S. will examine them for information about what the climate was like hundreds of thousands of years ago.
"The study of ice has shown us with extreme clarity what humans are doing to the Earth," Ed Brook, the director of COLDEX, said.
Air bubbles in ice trap greenhouse gasses
As snow falls it traps in tiny air bubbles from the day it fell. The snow in Antarctica never melts because it's so cold. Ice builds up, layer upon layer, with all those air bubbles inside. Scientists then measure the levels of greenhouse gasses trapped inside those bubbles. That allows them to reconstruct how the climate changed in the distant past.
"The information that we get, particularly from ice cores, is just so critical to our bedrock understanding of how Earth's climate works," Peter Neff, field research director for COLDEX, said.
The oldest existing ice core goes back 800,000 years. Scientists analyzed the ice cores over time, and they show that the amount of carbon dioxide, which is the big driver of climate change, goes up and down.
The level skyrocketed after the Industrial Revolution, then continued to get higher every year, which further warms our planet.
The goal of COLDEX
COLDEX is funded by the National Science Foundation, which is the primary source of scientific research grants in the United States. The goal is to extend the continuous ice core record beyond 800,000 years ago to 1.5 million years ago, or even further, when the Earth was even warmer than it is now due to higher levels of greenhouse gasses in the atmosphere.
"We don't claim that by going back in time we're necessarily going to see something exactly like what we're seeing now," Brook said. "What we're looking for are all the different ways the system can behave when it's warmer."
Identifying one spot on a massive continent that's likely to have 1.5 million years of perfectly preserved ice layers will take the COLDEX team several years.
Research in U.S. labs
After the ice is identified, researchers will drill down from the surface to remove the cores. Transport requires climate-controlled packaging to make sure the ice doesn't melt in transit. The canisters first land in the U.S. in Colorado at the National Science Foundation Ice Core Facility.
If the mission is successful, that ice will make it back to university labs, including Princeton University, where COLDEX field researcher Sarah Shackleton works.
"I still get like very trapped up in the idea of, like, this little bubble used to be part of the atmosphere 4 million years ago, and then it like kind of got trapped up in the ice sheet, and now it's in New Jersey and we're measuring it," she said.
A global effort
American scientists aren't the only ones searching for the oldest ice. Teams from several other countries are also in Antarctica on their own missions with the same goal. European and Australian teams are drilling in different areas of the continent.
The team that discovers the ice first is likely to garner international attention for its work.
- In:
- Climate Change
- Antarctica
David Schechter is a national environmental correspondent and the host of "On the Dot with David Schechter," a guided journey to explore how we're changing the earth and earth is changing us.
veryGood! (41985)
Related
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Utilities See Green in the Electric Vehicle Charging Business — and Growing Competition
- In the Southeast, power company money flows to news sites that attack their critics
- Kate Spade 24-Hour Flash Deal: This $360 Backpack Is on Sale for $79 and It Comes in 8 Colors
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Deep Decarbonization Plans for Michigan’s Utilities, but Different Paths
- How Johnny Depp Is Dividing Up His $1 Million Settlement From Amber Heard
- Inside Chris Evans' Private Romance With Alba Baptista
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Rachel Bilson’s Vibrator Confession Will Have You Buzzing
Ranking
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- FEMA Knows a Lot About Climate-Driven Flooding. But It’s Not Pushing Homeowners Hard Enough to Buy Insurance
- Alberta’s $5.3 Billion Backing of Keystone XL Signals Vulnerability of Canadian Oil
- How Johnny Depp Is Dividing Up His $1 Million Settlement From Amber Heard
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- 16 Amazon Beach Day Essentials For the Best Hassle-Free Summer Vacay
- Should Solar Geoengineering Be a Tool to Slow Global Warming, or is Manipulating the Atmosphere Too Dangerous?
- Samuel L. Jackson Marvelously Reacts to Bad Viral Face at Tony Awards 2023
Recommendation
Who's hosting 'Saturday Night Live' tonight? Musical guest, how to watch Dec. 14 episode
What Would It Take to Turn Ohio’s Farms Carbon-Neutral?
Starbucks workers plan a 3-day walkout at 100 U.S. stores in a unionization effort
What Does a Zero-Carbon Future Look Like for Transportation in Minnesota?
Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
U.S. saw 26 mass shootings in first 5 days of July alone, Gun Violence Archive says
Need an apartment? Prepare to fight it out with many other renters
Florida dog attack leaves 6-year-old boy dead