Big Picture Science: Old School
Antarctic
scientists have long known the region’s ice sheet holds clues to the planet’s
ancient past. Yet even the field’s foremost experts were shocked when they
extracted a six-million-year-old ice core — twice as old as expected and the
oldest recorded so far. Researchers say it will provide one of our best looks
ever into Earth's climatological record. In a relatively more recent past, the
discovery of 40,000-year-old notches and lines carved into artifacts and cave
walls in Germany, examples of protowriting, suggest humans began documenting
ideas thousands of years earlier than thought. Those timescales pale however,
when compared to the age of the Earth’s most ancient rocks, which have a story
to tell too. Find out how the planet’s most venerable rocks, formed billions of
years ago, reveal the geological conditions that allowed life to get a
foothold.
Guests:
- Huw Groucutt – Archeologist, Department of Classics and Archeology, University of Malta
- Ed Brook – Paleoclimatologist and professor of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences at Oregon State University
- Simon Lamb – Earth scientist and professor of geography in the School of Geography, Environment and Earth Sciences at Victoria University at Wellington, New Zealand. Author of “The Oldest Rocks on Earth: A Search for the Origins of Our World.”
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