The Guardian (USA)

Scientists prepare to drill for million-year-old ice in Antarctica

- AAP

Million-year-old ice buried deep in Antarctica could hold crucial informatio­n about the planet’s past and help climate prediction­s.

And scientists with the Australian Antarctic Division (AAD) are a step closer to unearthing it.

On Monday, they unveiled a drill designed to reach three kilometres below the surface of the frozen continent.

“What we’re embarking on over the next few years is to solve one of the last great problems in climate science,” glaciologi­st Tas van Ommen said.

The ice, believed to be up to 1.5m years old, is the target of several internatio­nal research projects.

“We’ll see in the ice, tiny bubbles that are trapped between snowflakes in the ice as it gets buried,” van Ommen said. “These tiny bubbles are time capsules of past atmosphere.

“We want to get that ice, analyse those time capsules and understand what [carbon dioxide] did in that period around one million years ago when the climate was changing.”

About 1 million years ago the Earth shifted from a 40,000-year ice age cycle to a 100,000-year cycle, van Ommen said.

“[Carbon dioxide] is tied up in that change and it changes the rate at which ice ages have worked in the past,” he added.

“We need to understand if the CO2 we put in the atmosphere will have long-term consequenc­es for the Earth in the future.”

The drill, made from stainless steel, aluminium bronze and titanium, is a mix of internatio­nal and Australian technology and can withstand -55C.

But reaching the buried ice won’t be a quick, or easy, feat. Drilling is expected to begin in 2021 and take four years in total.

A mobile 500-tonne base will take equipment to the work site, 1,200km inland from Antarctica’s coast.

“We are sending men and women into the most remote extreme environmen­t on earth,” AAD director, Kim Ellis, said. “It’s a really challengin­g adventure.”

 ??  ?? Gas bubbles trapped deep in ancient ice will give scientists clues about the atmosphere of the past. Photograph: Alamy Stock Photo
Gas bubbles trapped deep in ancient ice will give scientists clues about the atmosphere of the past. Photograph: Alamy Stock Photo

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