This is a re-post from Yale Climate Connections by SueEllen Campbell
Recent studies of Greenland’s enormous ice sheet are helping to illuminate our planet’s past and present — in ways that inform our vision of our future. Several of the articles included below are especially engaging for armchair scientists and adventurers, and these are marked with asterisks.**
Greenland’s melting ice will have a large impact on global sea level rise and thus matters greatly to millions of people, including those in some of the largest cities. Ice cores preserve a lot of information about Earth’s past climates. But those cores also contain an archive of human history, as this opinion piece explains:
For an interesting account of the effort to preserve ice cores before they melt, taking with them their rich archives, see “The race to preserve Earth’s historical climate record—its ice,” by Katherine Bourzac at Chemical & Engineering News (one free article per month).
How long ago was it that the ground beneath the ice sheet was ice-free? These stories are about this deep history.
Posted by Guest Author on Wednesday, 10 January, 2024
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