WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.010 --> 00:00:04.200 [music] 2 00:00:04.220 --> 00:00:08.220 For decades, scientists have been probing the Greenland Ice Sheet from the ground, air 3 00:00:08.240 --> 00:00:12.230 and space. Now a new study uses those observations 4 00:00:12.250 --> 00:00:16.420 to see within the ice sheet…laying bare a tale more than 5 00:00:16.440 --> 00:00:20.620 one hundred thousand years in the making. 6 00:00:20.640 --> 00:00:24.630 When we look inside an ice sheet, we can see distinct layers formed by thousands of years of snowfall. 7 00:00:24.650 --> 00:00:28.650 As snow accumulates, these layers get 8 00:00:28.670 --> 00:00:32.660 progressively compacted into ice, which then flows under its own weight. 9 00:00:32.680 --> 00:00:36.680 To get a precise history of a particular spot on 10 00:00:36.700 --> 00:00:40.690 an ice sheet, scientists drill into it and recover ice cores, 11 00:00:40.710 --> 00:00:44.710 which provide a record of the ice’s age and what the past 12 00:00:44.730 --> 00:00:48.740 climate was like. Seasonal variations, along with ash 13 00:00:48.760 --> 00:00:52.750 from volcanic eruptions show up in the cores allowing us 14 00:00:52.770 --> 00:00:56.770 to date the ice and correlate samples from different sites. 15 00:00:56.790 --> 00:01:00.800 To extend this age information across the ice sheet, 16 00:01:00.820 --> 00:01:04.820 the best tool that we have is ice-penetrating radar, mounted on aircraft 17 00:01:04.840 --> 00:01:08.840 flying low over the surface. Radar transmits 18 00:01:08.860 --> 00:01:12.870 electromagnetic pulses into the ice and records the reflected signals, 19 00:01:12.890 --> 00:01:17.050 allowing us to track the depth of the layers detected in the ice. 20 00:01:17.070 --> 00:01:21.070 Since 2009, NASA’s Operation IceBridge has 21 00:01:21.090 --> 00:01:25.080 flown over Greenland more than one hundred times with a wide variety of instruments, 22 00:01:25.100 --> 00:01:29.090 including radar, and generated vast quantities of data, 23 00:01:29.110 --> 00:01:33.110 adding to the work from many other missions. This has allowed researchers 24 00:01:33.130 --> 00:01:37.140 to generate a three dimensional map depicting the age of the ice throughout 25 00:01:37.160 --> 00:01:41.150 the Greenland Ice sheet. This 3D age map 26 00:01:41.170 --> 00:01:45.340 shows that three distinct periods of climate are evident within the ice sheet: 27 00:01:45.360 --> 00:01:49.430 The Holocene, shown here in green. The last ice age, 28 00:01:49.450 --> 00:01:53.540 shown in blue. And the Eemian, shown here in red. 29 00:01:53.560 --> 00:01:57.560 The top layers from the Holocene Period, formed during the last 30 00:01:57.580 --> 00:02:01.570 11.7 thousand years and are fairly flat and uniform. 31 00:02:01.590 --> 00:02:05.590 though the thickness varies depending on how much snowfall occurred. 32 00:02:05.610 --> 00:02:09.600 Below this, deeper within the ice sheet, we see layers that formed 33 00:02:09.620 --> 00:02:13.620 during the last ice age. Layers from this period are darker 34 00:02:13.640 --> 00:02:17.640 and more complex, having been further squeezed and sometimes folded 35 00:02:17.660 --> 00:02:21.660 as they flowed over the rugged bedrock below. 36 00:02:21.680 --> 00:02:25.690 Deeper still are layers of ice leftover from the warm period before the last ice age, 37 00:02:25.710 --> 00:02:29.710 more than one hundred fifteen thousand years ago. 38 00:02:29.730 --> 00:02:33.730 Eemian ice can reveal how the ice sheet responded to a period of warmth 39 00:02:33.750 --> 00:02:37.750 similar to the one we are experiencing today. 40 00:02:37.770 --> 00:02:41.810 Several ice cores have recovered Eemian ice, but it is difficult to interpret. 41 00:02:41.830 --> 00:02:45.820 This new map of the age of the ice sheet shows that there 42 00:02:45.840 --> 00:02:50.000 is more Eemian ice than expected in northern Greenland, where it may be easier 43 00:02:50.020 --> 00:02:54.010 for scientists to collect and analyze. 44 00:02:54.030 --> 00:02:58.030 This new analysis reveals a 3D map of the age 45 00:02:58.050 --> 00:03:02.050 of the Greenland ice sheet , from the oldest Eemian ice, 46 00:03:02.070 --> 00:03:06.250 to the layers deposited during the last ice age, to the ice that formed during the Holocene. 47 00:03:06.270 --> 00:03:10.260 The response of the ice sheet to past climate change 48 00:03:10.280 --> 00:03:14.270 led to its current age structure. Further study will help us 49 00:03:14.290 --> 00:03:18.290 to better understand how the Greenland Ice Sheet will respond to today’s changing climate. 50 00:03:18.310 --> 00:03:22.470 [music] 51 00:03:22.490 --> 00:03:26.490 [music] 52 00:03:26.510 --> 00:03:36.713 [music]