Concordia research station in Antarctica at 3233 m asl.
Concordia research station in Antarctica at 3233 m asl. Thibaut Vergoz, Institut polaire français. Even in earlier warm periods there were pulse-like releases of CO
2 to the atmosphere. Today's anthropogenic CO
2 rise, however, is more than six times larger and almost ten times faster than previous jumps in the CO
2 concentration. This is the conclusion reached by a European research team led by the University of Bern. A new measurement technology developed at the University of Bern provides unique insights into the climate of the past. Previous CO
2 concentrations in the atmosphere could be reconstructed more accurately than ever before, thanks to high-resolution measurements made on an Antarctic ice core.
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