When scientists talk about climate archives, they don't have a real book or a library in mind. Instead, they mean glacier or ground ice, fossilised animal remains such as mussel shells or sediment samples from the lake or sea bed that they have brought to the surface with drills. All three "archives" have one thing in common. They contain either water (usually in the form of ice) or silicon dioxide (e.g. in the opal skeleton of diatoms). The special thing about this is that the geochemical fingerprint of both substances differs depending on the environmental conditions that prevailed when the diatoms grew or the snow trickled down Greenland's ice sheet. "Both water and silicon dioxide contain oxygen isotopes, the ratio of which we analyse in our stable isotope laboratory. Depending on the ambient temperature, the stable isotopes are incorporated in a certain ratio in an ice crystal lattice, in the shell of a mussel or in the framework of the diatom. We measure this ratio in our laboratory and can use our results to determine, for example, the air temperature that prevailed at the time of formation," says AWI climate researcher Dr Hanno Meyer.
He heads the ISOLAB Stable Isotope Facility at the AWI Potsdam, where some of the world's most important temperature reconstructions of climate history have been carried out: for example, the analysis of the Dronning Maud Land ice core, which AWI researchers and their international partners recovered in the so-called EPICA project.