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Memories in the Ice

It's the Earth's largest archive, and it is disappearing before our very eyes.

Illimani summit at over 6,400 m, during the Ice Memory project in Bolivia
Illimani summit at over 6,400 m, during the Ice Memory project in Bolivia

© Bruno JOURDAIN / IGE / CNRS Images

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Trapped in the ice in glaciers and the ice caps, we find atmospheric gases and pollen deposited by the wind, enabling us to trace the history of our planet. In this series of documentaries, we follow the teams of scientists as they attempt to decipher the messages held in these archives and preserve them for generations to come.

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A portrait of Claire Waelbroeck, a paleoclimatologist at the Laboratoire des sciences du climat et de l'environnement (LSCE) in Gif-sur-Yvette. This young researcher, of Belgian origin, winner of the CNRS Bronze Medal in 2003, describes her scientific work. She studies past climate variation through the analysis of marine sediment and polar ice. Her research aims at reconstructing natural climate variability in order to understand the current climate more fully.

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Claire Waelbroeck, a Paleoclimatologist
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In the Laboratory of Physical Geography in Meudon, Agnès Gauthier, a palynologist, reconstitutes the paleoenvironment and the paleoclimates which were active in our part of the world during a hundred of thousands years. She indentifies and counts pollen grains extracted from sediment cores, which were sampled from the Maar of Allerêt, a volcanic lake now dried up, located in the Massif Central.

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Pollen and Climates
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An interview with Jean Jouzel, Director of the Institut Pierre Simon Laplace in Paris, who received the CNRS Gold Medal in 2002 jointly with Claude Lorius. Jean Jouzel develops mathematical models for calculating climate warming as a function of the nature and gas content of the atmosphere. Bubbles of air in ice cores collected in the Antarctic reveal the composition of the atmosphere in past centuries. Scientists thus obtain correlations between greenhouse gases and climate cycles. Jean Jouzel…

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Jean Jouzel
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An interview with Claude Lorius, Emeritus Director of Research at CNRS, who received the CNRS Gold Medal in 2002. He received the award jointly with Jean Jouzel, for research which revealed the links between the quantity of greenhouse gases and climate change, resulting from the analysis of the air bubbles in the ice which has been accumulating for millennia at the South Pole. Claude Lorius recalls his career, beginning with his first visit to the Antarctic in 1957, at the time of the…

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Claude Lorius

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