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As part of a mission in Antarctica led by the National Science Foundation's Center for Oldest Ice Exploration, Guarini PhD student Jacob Chalif is drilling for ancient ice to illuminate future climate patterns.
Guarini PhD student Jacob Chalif is braving sub-zero temperatures and 40-miles-per-hour winds this winter in search of the planet's oldest ice. As a member of a multi-institutional team sent to Antarctica by the National Science Foundation's Center for Oldest Ice Exploration, he and 11 fellow scientists are drilling for ice cores in hopes of breaking the record for the oldest sample, which is four million years old. Air bubbles in the ice provide snapshots of past atmospheric air, ultimately helping scientists predict future weather patterns.
"Ice cores provide an unparalleled archive of past atmospheric air. There is no other way to get in a time machine and get air that is a million years old," Chalif said in an interview with Vermont's WCAX. The project closely relates to Chalif's work at Dartmouth, where he serves as the lab manager of the Ice, Climate, and Environment Lab, which is led by earth sciences professor Erich Osterberg. The researchers plan to bring several thousand pounds of ice back to the U.S. for further study. (Photos courtesy of Jacob Chalif)
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