{"id":39135,"date":"2024-05-23t15:22:31","date_gmt":"2024-05-23t15:22:31","guid":{"rendered":"\/\/www.getitdoneaz.com\/?p=39135"},"modified":"2024-05-23t15:22:33","modified_gmt":"2024-05-23t15:22:33","slug":"past-climate-change","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"\/\/www.getitdoneaz.com\/story\/past-climate-change\/","title":{"rendered":"northwestern university graduate students dive into the past to understand current climate change"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
thick winter socks: check. thermal underwear: check. non-perishable food: check. bear spray: check. industrial-sized pipe: check. bailey nash\u2019s packing list for her upcoming trip looks a little different as she pursues her travels as a climate science detective. <\/p>\n\n\n\n
nash, a third-year ph.d. candidate in northwestern university\u2019s department of earth and planetary sciences, will travel to southern greenland this summer with a team of other researchers to collect sediment cores from lake beds that offer a window into the past of climate cues.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
\u201cbasically what we do is show up to the lake, fill this big raft, float into the middle of the lake, shove what\u2019s essentially a plumbing pipe down into the bottom of the lake, and then we pull it up,\u201d nash said.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
the research team returns to professor yarrow axford\u2019s quaternary sediment laboratory on campus where nash works with axford, her ph.d. adviser, to understand climate change by analyzing components in the mud samples accrued over thousands of years.<\/p>\n\n\n
students in axford\u2019s lab operate under a paleolimnology focus, according to nash, which is the study of lakes throughout the past. nash said the goal is to use the story of lakes changing over time to paint a bigger picture of how the earth\u2019s climate has changed.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
other student researchers in axford’s lab seek a similar goal from sediment cores extracted much closer to home. aidan burdick, also a third-year ph.d. student in the department of earth and planetary sciences, gathers sediment cores from lakes in the midwest. burdick gestured to a long half-tube of sediment from crystal lake, illinois, on the table in front of him as he described its revelations about the past climate record.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
\u201cthis core represents about 1,200 years of time,\u201d burdick said. \u201cwe use a technique called radiocarbon dating\u201d to follow the trail of time.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
burdick said radiocarbon dating helps them determine the age of the layers in their sediment cores because it is based on a type of carbon isotope that decays over a set period of time once organic matter such as moss has died. he pointed to the layers on the core that marked when the europeans settlers pioneered in illinois.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
a bulk of the lab\u2019s work \u2014 both in the arctic and in the midwest \u2014 centers around how knowledge of the past can help scientists understand current and future changes associated with climate change, said nash. the sediment core displayed in the lab reveals evidence of settlement, according to burdick, which points toward human effects on climate change.<\/p>\n\n\n\n