Clues to the Future of an Ice Sheet Unearthed from an Ancient Soil Sample

Clues to the Future of an Ice Sheet Unearthed from an Ancient Soil Sample


In 1966, ⁤scientists at Camp ⁣Century, a ⁤now‍ abandoned U.S. military⁣ base in ⁣the Arctic, drilled⁣ deep into the Greenland ice sheet, extracting⁣ a ‌cylinder ⁢of ice nearly a mile long ⁤along with⁤ 12 feet of​ the frozen⁣ sediment that ⁤sat beneath ⁢it.

“That ⁤was‌ a pretty miraculous engineering feat that has​ been​ really ⁢hard to repeat,”⁣ said Andrew ‌Christ, ‍a geoscientist who⁣ recently completed⁢ a postdoctoral fellowship at the⁣ University of Vermont.

The sample was⁢ the first deep ‌ice core that scientists ⁢had⁤ ever⁣ collected, and​ over the decades that ‍followed,‍ the⁢ ice became ​the ⁢subject of ⁤intense ‍scientific ‍study, providing ‍critical clues​ about⁤ the⁤ planet’s climate history. The ‍same could ​not be said⁢ for the‌ sediment, ⁤which was largely​ overlooked before vanishing completely.

In 2017, the sediment was ⁢rediscovered ​in a freezer in Denmark. Now, a ⁤study of‍ the frozen⁢ samples‌ is⁣ shedding new‍ light on Greenland’s past and, perhaps, providing‍ an ominous⁤ warning for the future.‍ The findings, which were published​ in Science on Thursday, ⁢suggest that roughly 400,000‍ years ago⁢ the Camp ⁢Century​ site ​in ‍northwestern⁤ Greenland‌ was‌ temporarily ice-free. They add to accumulating evidence that Greenland’s⁢ ice sheet has not ​been stable for the last ⁢2.5 million ⁣years, as​ scientists once ‌assumed.

“The big take-home ⁢message from this is‌ Greenland is vulnerable,”said Paul ⁤Bierman,⁣ a geoscientist at the⁤ University⁣ of⁢ Vermont and an⁤ author of the ‌new⁢ study. “The ⁣ice sheet⁤ has melted⁢ in the ‌past, and ⁤therefore it can⁣ melt ‌again.”

Dr. ‍Bierman and⁣ an ⁤international ⁣team of ⁢collaborators‌ first‍ began studying the sediment​ several years⁢ ago, and they quickly‌ made‌ a ⁣surprising discovery. The top layer⁢ of the sample, where they had expected to find little more than⁤ a jumble of compressed rock, was full of ⁤plant matter:⁢ twigs, leaves,‌ tiny ‌pieces of moss. The discovery, which‍ the scientists ‌published ⁣in​ 2021, ​suggested that ​the area had ​not⁤ always⁢ been covered in ice.

“But the question ⁢we didn’t answer at that time was ⁢how old⁤ were these ‌plants and the sediment from ‍this landscape‍ that⁢ didn’t⁢ have ice ‌on it?”⁢ said ‍Dr. Christ,‍ who is also​ an⁣ author on the new ⁤analysis. ⁢“This⁣ new⁤ study in Science is telling us ‍when that​ happened, which was 400,000 years ago.”

To arrive at that date,⁤ the scientists ‍used​ a technique known ⁤as luminescence dating.⁢ As⁣ minerals sit in ⁢the ground,⁢ they are exposed to environmental ​radiation and accumulate ⁣free electrons.⁤ Those electrons build up over‍ time, ​but exposure ⁢to sunlight‌ essentially sweeps the ⁣electrons​ away, ⁣as a⁢ washing machine ‍might remove the⁢ layers⁤ of dirt‌ that build ​up⁤ on ​an item‌ of clothing‍ over the course ‍of a weekslong camping​ trip,⁤ Dr.​ Christ said.

By ‌measuring⁢ the signal that ​the accumulated electrons were​ giving off, the ⁤researchers were ‍able to calculate the last time​ that the ​top layer of ⁤sediment ⁤had been exposed⁢ to‌ the sun — ‍and⁣ thus, how‌ long‌ ago ⁣the site had ‌been‍ ice-free.

(Tammy ⁣Rittenour, a geoscientist at Utah…

2023-07-21 ‍01:00:19
Link ⁤from⁣ www.nytimes.com
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