Discover the Ancient Ice: Uncovering the Arctic’s Oldest Glacier Remnant

Discover the Ancient Ice: Uncovering the Arctic’s Oldest Glacier Remnant




Hidden on a secluded island in the Canadian Arctic, scientists have made a remarkable discovery – the remnants of an ancient glacier that could be more than a million ​years old. This finding marks the unearthing of possibly the most ancient glacier ice ever found preserved in permafrost, which is‍ ground ‌frozen for at least two consecutive years in the​ Arctic.‍ The revelation was detailed in a report published on January 1st in Geology. With human-induced climate change causing rapid melting, time is of the essence for researchers eager to ​study this unique glacier.
In 2009, Fortier and his team were investigating a buried fossilized ⁣forest on Bylot Island in Canada’s Nunavut Territory‌ when⁤ they unexpectedly came across areas ‍affected by recent landslides⁣ triggered by permafrost thawing. These landslides exposed transparent layers of ice buried just above the fossil forest several meters underground. Radiocarbon dating revealed that this ice was over 60,000 years old⁢ – a surprising revelation for Fortier.
Furthermore,‍ within sediment layers above the ice, researchers identified ⁣magnetic ⁢mineral alignments indicating Earth’s magnetic field reversal around 770,000 years⁢ ago – suggesting that the glacier is at least that age. Previous studies dated the fossil forest beneath it to approximately 2.8 to 2.4 million years ago, setting a maximum age‍ limit for the ice.
Fortier describes this discovery as proof ⁢of⁢ permafrost’s resilience.⁣ Despite projections indicating widespread permafrost thawing by century-end due to climate change, this ⁢preserved glacier has endured through warmer interglacial​ periods than today’s climate conditions suggest ‍possible disappearance may not be as imminent as⁢ feared.

2025-01-21 09:00:00⁣
Source⁣ from www.sciencenews.org

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