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Expedition Strikes Ancient Bedrock Beneath Greenland Ice

The ice core-drill takes the samples out of the ice.
(Image credit: Sepp Kipfstuhl, Alfred Wegener Institute.)

After more than a year of drilling through ice in one of the harshest environments on earth, scientists in Greenland hit bedrock more than 8,300 feet (2,530 meters) below the surface of the Arctic island's vast ice sheet last week.

With this milestone, the group of researchers has sampled what it was after all along: very, very old ice. Specifically, ice from 115,000 to 330,000 years ago, a time known as the Eemian interglacial period, when the planet was about 5 degrees Fahrenheit (2.7 degrees Celsius) warmer than it is today.

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