Eric Cravens, assistant curator at the National Ice Core Laboratory in Lakewood, Colorado, stands behind a wall of aluminum-encased ice cores. The ice in this room, kept at –33 degrees Fahrenheit, contains snapshots of atmospheric history dating back 440,000 years from various regions, including Antarctica and Greenland. “The ice core is an excellent record of the snowfall and atmosphere of a period of time,” says Ted Scampos, a climatologist who uses data from ice cores for his work. Dust found in the ice gives a record of what was in the air thousands of years ago, whether from volcanic eruptions or human activity, and the isotopic composition of the hydrogen and oxygen molecules in the snow give a record of the temperature of the earth at the time. Generally, more heavy isotopes mean a warmer climate. After a core is drilled, it is dried, wrapped in plastic, and slid into ...
Visual Science: The History of the World, Contained in a Block of Ice
Ice core samples reveal the atmosphere's secrets as far back as 400,000 years.

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