Professor Darren Larsen and former student Aria Blumm 鈥19 analyzed sediment from a glacial lake to learn about glacier fluctuations and climate shifts over the last 10,000 years.
Assistant Professor of Geology Darren Larsen is the lead author on in Science Advances along with co-authors Blumm and Sarah Crump of the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research at the University of Colorado. The research, funded in part by the National Science Foundation, focuses on the history of the Teton Glacier鈥攁n iconic glacier in Wyoming鈥檚 Grand Teton National Park鈥攐ver the past 10,000 years. Over multiple expeditions, a team of researchers collected sediment core samples extending nearly 40 feet below the bottom of Delta Lake.
The lake鈥檚 location just downstream of the glacier has allowed it to collect and preserve layers of sediment deposited by glacier erosion. Components within the sediment like organic material, rock, sand, silt and clay can be analyzed in the lab to reveal a record of past climate and weather patterns.
鈥淥ne of the motivations for this work to reconstruct past glacier fluctuations is to really get at the underlying changes in climate that drove them,鈥 Larsen says. 鈥淗aving this continuous sedimentary archive associated with an individual glacier is unusual鈥攖his is one of the most well-resolved and most complete glacier records in the western United States.鈥
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