The University of Vermont Magazine, Fall 2023

Page 26

| THE GREEN

Greenland Was Green – More Recently Than We Thought

Research by UVM's Paul Bierman and colleagues suggests that approximately 400,000 years ago, much of Greenland may have looked like this present-day small stretch of ice-free northern landscape on the island.

CLIMATE | A large portion of Greenland was an ice-free tundra landscape—perhaps covered by trees and roaming woolly mammoths— in the recent geologic past, new UVM-led research, published in July in the journal Science, shows. These findings indicate that the ice sheet on Greenland may be more sensitive to human-caused climate change than previously understood—and will be vulnerable to irreversible, rapid melting in coming centuries.

led by UVM's Paul Bierman, a geoscientist in the Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources and a fellow in the Gund Institute for Environment, showed that it likely melted less than one million years ago. Other scientists, working in central Greenland, gathered data showing the ice there melted at least once in the last 1.1 million years—but until this study, no one knew exactly when the ice was gone.

During the Cold War, a secret U.S. Army mission, at Camp Century in northwestern Greenland, drilled down through 4,560 feet of ice on the frozen island—and then kept drilling to pull out a 12-foot-long tube of soil and rock from below the ice. Then this icy sediment was lost in a freezer for decades. It was accidentally rediscovered in 2017 and shown to hold not just sediment but also leaves and moss, remnants of an ice-free landscape, perhaps a boreal forest.

Now, using advanced luminescence technology and rare isotope analysis, the team has created a starker picture: large portions of Greenland’s ice sheet melted much more recently than a million years ago. The new study presents direct evidence that sediment just beneath the ice sheet was deposited by flowing water in an ice-free environment during a moderate warming period from 424,000 to 374,000 years ago. This melting caused at least five feet of sea level rise around the globe.

Until recently, geologists believed that Greenland was a fortress of ice, mostly unmelted for millions of years. But two years ago, using the Camp Century ice core, a team of scientists

“It's really the first bulletproof evidence that much of the Greenland ice sheet vanished when it got warm,” says Bierman. He co-led the new study with lead author Drew Christ, a post-

24 | U V M M A G A Z I N E

JOSHUA BROWN


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Fulbrights Forge Connections Around the Globe

4min
pages 12-13

Extra Credit: A Characteristically Quiet Centennial

2min
page 82

Catamount Nation: How a Sense of Belonging Translated to Success in School

3min
pages 74-75

Catamount Nation: The Connector

3min
pages 70-73

Back on Campus: Fostering Clean Energy Innovation

3min
pages 66-71

Open Access

11min
pages 58-61

Preserving a Legacy

6min
pages 52-58

Beyond Opioids

23min
pages 43-51

Listening to Leviathans

22min
pages 33-41

Celebrating the Fleming as a Gateway to the Arts

3min
pages 30-32

From Housekeeping to Research

3min
page 29

A Record Win

2min
page 28

Greenland Was Green –More Recently Than We Thought

3min
pages 26-27

Lessons from Europe’s Old-Growth Forests

4min
pages 24-25

Innovative Breakthrough Advances RSV Prevention

3min
pages 22-23

UVM People: Adam Nagler '89

3min
pages 20-21

Learning with Every Bite

7min
pages 18-19

Grad Student Promise Recognized by NSF

4min
page 17

Celebrating 50 Years of Environmental Research and Action

3min
page 16

Next-Generation Research

2min
page 15

Lessons in Hidden History

2min
page 15

Ideas into Action

3min
page 14

Sustainability Check-In with Elizabeth Palchak, PhD

4min
pages 11-13

UVM Tops $260 Million in Research Support

3min
page 10

UVM Responds to Record Flooding

4min
pages 8-9

President's Perspective: Solutions for a Healthier Environment and Society

3min
pages 4-6
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.