38th Conference on Broadcast Meteorology

10.1

West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) Divide Ice Core Project

Joe Souney, Univ. of New Hampshire, Durham, NH

Abstract: The U.S research community is conducting a deep ice coring project in West Antarctica for studies of climate, ice sheet history and cryobiology. This project is collecting a deep ice core from the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) ice flow divide and integrating approximately 30 separate but synergistic projects to analyze the ice and interpret the records. The most significant characteristic of the WAIS Divide project is the development of climate records with an absolute, annual-layer-counted chronology for the most recent ~40,000 years. Lower temporal resolution records will extend to ~100,000 years before present. The WAIS Divide ice core will provide the first Southern Hemisphere climate and greenhouse gas records of comparable time resolution and duration to the Greenland ice cores enabling detailed comparison of environmental conditions between the northern and southern hemispheres, and the study of greenhouse gas concentrations in the paleo-atmosphere, with a greater level of detail than previously possible.

wrf recordingRecorded presentation

Session 10, Climate and Climate Change
Sunday, 27 June 2010, 11:05 AM-12:00 PM, Napoleon III

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