How Swiss research into 1.5 million-year-old ice could solve climate puzzles

How Swiss research into 1.5 million-year-old ice could solve climate puzzles

Wed, May 10th 2023

Swiss researchers have developed a method for analyzing 1.5 million-year-old ice that may help solve a climate puzzle.
Frozen in time: Swiss scientists unlock climate puzzles using million-year-old glaciers (Credit: SwissTech).

(SwissTech) The EU project Beyond EPICA – Oldest Ice is investigating changes in temperature, atmospheric composition and the carbon cycle over the course of climate history. To this end, plans are under way to retrieve around 1.5 million-year-old ice cores are from the Antarctic ice sheet from a depth of around 2700 meters in 2025.

Some 15,000 to 20,000 years of climate history are compressed in a single meter of ice core in the 1.5-million-year-old ice, placing an entirely new set of demands on the analysis of ice cores. Ice cores are an extremely important climate archive because they are the only way to directly measure past greenhouse gas concentrations.

Ice cores are an extremely valuable climate archive because the air they contain is the only way to directly measure past greenhouse gas concentrations.

A freshly-drilled ice core is studied by Swiss scientists (Credit: SwissTech).
New method for tiny air samples

To examine this rare ice core, new technologies are necessary. The University of Bern and the Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Testing and Research (Empa) are playing a major role in the development of these novel techniques, according to a recent press release. A group of researchers from the University of Bern, led by Hubertus Fischer, has developed a method that takes tiny air samples from the ancient ice.

A new sublimation extraction system has made it possible to obtain small air samples from an ice core without contaminating them by slowly converting the ice core samples from a solid state to a gaseous state. To do this, the air is frozen at a temperature of -258°C.

The air samples are then analyzed with a laser spectrometer developed at Empa. This laser spectrometer can measure the greenhouse gases CO2, CH4, N20 and the isotopic composition of CO2 in an air sample as small as 1.5 milliliters.

Achieving this high precision in such small samples was virtually unimaginable for a long time. We are proud that this enables the analysis of the valuable ice cores.

Lukas Emmenegger, head of Empa’s Air Pollutants/Environmental Technology department
Researching the history of climate changes could help scientists prepare for the future (Credit: SwissTech).
On the trail of a climate mystery

Analysis of the ice core should help us better understand the interplay between warm and cold periods. Until about a million years ago, periods of very cold and very warm climates alternated at intervals of 40,000 years. Since then, ice ages and interglacial periods have alternated only about every 100,000 years. So far, it is unclear how this change came about.

Climate researchers suspect that greenhouse gases played a key role. Ice core drilling in Antarctica will now test this hypothesis. By the end of the second drilling season, from November 2022 to January 2023, the 15-member international research team had reached a depth of 800 meters. If all goes according to plan, the required depth of 2,700 meters should be reached in 2025.

This article has been reprinted with permission from SwissTech.

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