2000 meters deep in Antarctic ice
Stiftung Alfred-Wegener-Institut
für Polar- und Meeresforschung
European ice core drilling project at Kohnen station retrieves old ice
for climate research.
At the Kohnen station operated by Alfred-Wegener-Institute for Polar-
and Marine Research, Bremerhaven, the international drilling team reached
a depth of 2000 meters on January 7 at 0210 hours. The ice from that depth
is about 100.000 years old and yields information on climate conditions
of the distant past.
The 25 women and men at Kohnen base (75°S 0°W) celebrated the
2000 meters in the morning with champagne and music at minus 25°C
and in bright sunshine. Meanwhile work continues around the clock in three
shifts. Till the end of the season in the beginning of February a depth
of 2400 meters should be reached. Drilling down to bedrock at a depth
of approximately 2800 meters will take yet another field season.
The ice which we retrieve from that region is the first deep ice core
from the Atlantic sector of Antarctica says Prof. Heinz Miller, the project
coordinator, and will allow to study climate linkages and phasing between
northern and southern hemisphere in unprecedented detail. It will therefore
help to better understand the climate system and its sometimes very rapid
changes.
The drilling operation at Kohnen base is part of the European Project
for Ice Coring in Antarctica (EPICA), which operates at 2 locations of
the icy continent. At the station Dome Concordia ice has already been
recovered which is 900.000 years old; it is the longest climate archive
yet recovered from ice. The ice core at Kohnen station will reach an age
of approximately 300.000 years but will have a higher temporal resolution.
At Dome Concordia drilling operation has been suspended temporarily and
will be resumed in 2004/05 when additional funds become available. There
about 100 meters of ice wait to be cored extending the climate record
from ice to about 1 million years.
EPICA is a long-term large scale project under the umbrella of European
Science Foundation with researchers from 10 European
nations participating and which is funded from
national sources and from European Union.
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