A new paper has been published today in Geology by the Northeast Greenland Caves Project leader Dr. Gina Moseley and science partner Prof. Christoph Spötl, which shows that in the cold, glacial climate c. 30,000 to 60,000 years ago, strong teleconnections existed between Greenland and central Europe. The paper is permanently open access and available to all.
Read moreShort cave-science documentary film
Thanks to expedition partner Robbie Shone, and also to Martin Moseley for his editing skills, we now have a short documentary about the work of the Innsbruck Quaternary Research Group in Conturines Cave in the Dolomites. The work in the caves of Northeast Greenland will not be quite on the same scale as this, but […]
Read moreWeather station installation on the Suldenferner debris-covered glacier
At the moment, the Northeast Greenland Caves Project is concentrating on planning and fundraising in preparation for our expedition in the summer of 2015. In the meantime, we are however busy elsewhere, helping colleagues out with other interesting climate-change related projects.
Read moreFrostbytes: a collection of short films related to climate-change research
Are you interested in knowing more about the research that is being undertaken into climate change? Short, 30-60 second films of researchers talking about their current work and interesting discoveries are available as “Frostbytes” from the Climate and Cryosphere project(CliC).
Read more