Two Central Washington University graduate students joined Geological Sciences Professor Dr. Susan Kaspari in Norway last ...
Based at Concordia Station in Antarctica, the Ice Memory Sanctuary will preserve glacial ice cores for centuries to come.
As global warming melts glaciers, a novel sanctuary in Antarctica is opening to preserve ice samples
An ice core is something of a time capsule, containing the history of the Earth’s past atmosphere in a frozen climate archive ...
Scientists on Wednesday inaugurated the first global repository of mountain ice cores, preserving the history of the Earth's atmosphere in an Antarctic vault for future generations to study as global ...
Green Matters on MSN
Scientists launch first ice-core library in Antarctica to preserve vanishing climate records
Named 'Ice Memory Sanctuary,' the first-of-its-kind library maintains a record of ice cores from across the world.
Ancient sediment pulled from nearly a mile below the Greenland ice sheet — and later stored for roughly two decades at UB, whose researchers are still studying it today — is the focus of a new film.
As mountain glaciers melt at accelerating rates worldwide, the Ice Memory Foundation has opened the world’s first ice-core ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Like the inverse of the mythical butterfly flapping its wings in China, an ice core extracted from Greenland can reveal the rise ...
In an exciting development for climate science, researchers have extracted an Arctic ice core containing an astonishing 1.2 million years of Earth’s climate history. The discovery, reported by the ...
(CNN) — An international research team has successfully drilled and retrieved a 9,186-foot-long (2,800-meter-long) ice core from Antarctica that dates back 1.2 million years. The sample extended so ...
An international team of scientists announced Thursday they’ve successfully drilled one of the oldest ice cores yet, penetrating nearly 2 miles (2.8 kilometers) to Antarctic bedrock to reach ice they ...
BUFFALO, N.Y. — Ancient sediment pulled from nearly a mile below the Greenland ice sheet — and later stored for roughly two decades at the University at Buffalo, whose researchers are still studying ...
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