In Canada's Arctic, a landscape unseen in over 40,000 years

Glacial retreat in the Canadian Arctic has uncovered landscapes that haven’t been ice-free in more than 40,000 years and the region may be experiencing its warmest century in 115,000 years, new University of Colorado Boulder research finds.

Science & Tech 02:25 30.01.2019

The study, published January 25, 2019, in the journal Nature Communications, uses radiocarbon dating to determine the ages of plants collected at the edges of 30 ice caps on Baffin Island, west of Greenland.

Researchers from the University of Colorado, led by Simon Pendleton, lead author and a doctoral researcher in CU Boulder's Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR), have been studying the retreat of glaciers on Baffin Island for over 12 years. Pendleton has witnessed the changes over the years first hand.

“We know there is a dramatic change occurring and will continue to occur, but I don’t know that we were expecting to find evidence that we’re now seeing landscapes and temperatures similar to that of the last interglacial period,” Pendleton said, reports ZME Science.

Baffin Island is the world's fifth largest island and lies within the Canadian Arctic, west of Greenland. The region is one of high plateaus, covered in ice caps and deeply incised fjords. The thin ice caps on the plateaus have basically acted as natural cold storage for the ancient moss and lichens - keeping them in their original growth position for millennia.

Because Baffin Island is within the Arctic Circle, the region is experiencing warming at a rate two to three times the global average, and according to Pendleton, the glaciers and ice caps are going to react to the warming at an accelerated rate.

"We travel to the retreating ice margins, sample newly exposed plants preserved on these ancient landscapes and carbon date the plants to get a sense of when the ice last advanced over that location," Pendleton said.

"Because dead plants are efficiently removed from the landscape, the radiocarbon age of rooted plants define the last time summers were as warm, on average, like those of the past century"

Collecting plants and rock samples

The research team collected a total of 124 plant, moss, and rock samples from 30 sites around the island, all from within a meter from the edge of the ice cap, the most vulnerable part of the melting ice cap. The team also collected quartz samples from the sites in order to further establish the age and ice cover.

All the samples were processed and radiocarbon dated back in labs at the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR) at CU Boulder and the University of California Irvine. Incredibly, the plants from all 30 sites have likely been continuously covered by ice for at least the past 40,000 years, according to Science Daily.

"Unlike biology, which has spent the past three billion years developing schemes to avoid being impacted by climate change, glaciers have no strategy for survival," said Gifford Miller, senior author of the research and a professor of geological sciences at CU Boulder.

"They're well behaved, responding directly to summer temperature. If summers warm, they immediately recede; if summers cool, they advance. This makes them one of the most reliable proxies for changes in summer temperature."

Significance of findings

When researchers compare temperature data reconstructed from Baffin and Greenland ice cores with their findings, it suggests that the temperatures we are experiencing today represent the warmest century for the region in 115,000 years.

While it may be quite an achievement for today's scientists to walk on newly exposed ground that has been covered in ice for 40,000 years, they are doing so at the expense of a warming world. “To be able to see it and walk on the ice cap and understand we’re in a time that’s exposing landscapes that haven’t seen sunlight in possibly 120,000 years, that has a profound effect,” Pendleton said.

Additional co-authors of the study include Scott Lehman, Sarah Crump and Robert Anderson of CU Boulder; Nathaniel Lifton of Purdue University; and John Southon of the University of California Irvine. The National Science Foundation provided funding for the research.

Top Ukrainian Commander's Stepson Leads Pro-Russian Convoy in Sydney - VIDEO

News line

Massachusetts man who received first-ever pig kidney transplant dies at 62
Massachusetts man who received first-ever pig kidney transplant dies at 62
16:13 12.05.2024
Fire destroys one of biggest shopping centres in Warsaw
15:49 12.05.2024
Border guards of Russia leave the border regions of Armenia and Azerbaijan
15:20 12.05.2024
Azerbaijani para-taekwondo fighter crowned European champion
Azerbaijani para-taekwondo fighter crowned European champion
14:55 12.05.2024
Top Ukrainian Commander's Stepson Leads Pro-Russian Convoy in Sydney - VIDEO
14:33 12.05.2024
Flash floods kill more than 300 people in northern Afghanistan after heavy rains, UN says
14:01 12.05.2024
Thousands protest against ‘foreign influence’ bill in Georgia
13:06 12.05.2024
Israeli military intensifies bombardment of Jabalia refugee camp
Israeli military intensifies bombardment of Jabalia refugee camp
13:03 12.05.2024
Ethiopian FM, Azerbaijani ambassador discuss COP29
12:20 12.05.2024
Swiss Vice Chancellor Andre Simonazzi dies at 55 while hiking
11:45 12.05.2024
Luka Modric set to depart from Real Madrid at season’s end
Luka Modric set to depart from Real Madrid at season’s end
11:00 12.05.2024
Lithuania voting in presidential election and citizenship referendum
10:23 12.05.2024
Russian Prime Minister to have 10 deputies
Russian Prime Minister to have 10 deputies
10:00 12.05.2024
Azerbaijani Deputy Defense Minister placed on reserve
09:42 12.05.2024
Swiss singer wins Eurovision 2024 contest - VIDEO
09:26 12.05.2024
Ceasefire in Gaza to happen after Hamas releases hostages - Biden
09:01 12.05.2024
Top Ukrainian Commander's Stepson Leads Pro-Russian Convoy in Sydney
01:10 12.05.2024
Shusha hosts 7th “Kharibulbul" International Music Festival
21:00 11.05.2024
US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken Honors partner of IEPF Heidi Kühn - PHOTOS
18:00 11.05.2024
President, First Lady participate in opening of Kharibulbul Music Festival in Shusha
16:51 11.05.2024
Spanish Photographer Gervasio Sanchez Concludes Visit to Azerbaijan as Guest of IEPF - PHOTOS
16:00 11.05.2024
Head of UN NGO Branch to Visit Azerbaijan - PHOTOS
14:00 11.05.2024
Mbappé announces PSG exit ahead of likely Real Madrid move
13:23 11.05.2024
Former Armenian MP detained in Russia
Former Armenian MP detained in Russia
12:59 11.05.2024
Actions of disobedience resume in Yerevan and several Armenian regions
12:38 11.05.2024
Price of Azerbaijan oil drops
Price of Azerbaijan oil drops
12:19 11.05.2024
Azerbaijani and Armenian FMs to continue negotiations in Almaty today
11:55 11.05.2024
President Ilham Aliyev receives ICESCO Director General in Shusha
11:42 11.05.2024
Uzbek Representative IEPF Shukhrat Barlas Receives "100th Anniversary of Heydar Aliyev" Jubilee Medal - PHOTOS/VIDEO
11:25 11.05.2024
President: We never wanted war, and we don't want it today either
10:50 11.05.2024
Kharibulbul International Music Festival to kick off in Shusha today
10:35 11.05.2024
President of COP29 visits COMSATS headquarters in Pakistan
10:13 11.05.2024
School bus accident in Antalya, Türkiye: 25 injured as student transport plunges into ravine
09:58 11.05.2024
United Nations General Assembly backs Palestinian bid for membership
09:00 11.05.2024
President Ilham Aliyev congratulates Shusha residents on their returning to native land
President Ilham Aliyev congratulates Shusha residents on their returning to native land
23:00 10.05.2024
President: A new history of Shusha begins today
22:33 10.05.2024
Azerbaijani President: The war could not have ended successfully without Shusha
21:45 10.05.2024
Is a Peace Agreement Between Azerbaijan and Armenia Possible by November?
21:00 10.05.2024
Spain, Ireland intend to recognize Palestine, Borrell says
20:00 10.05.2024
Brazilian flood death toll reaches 107
Brazilian flood death toll reaches 107
19:40 10.05.2024
Hamısı