How do scientists determine historical CO2 levels?

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We often hear in the news that CO2 levels have risen or fallen compared to a couple, or even hundreds or thousands of years ago. How do they know what the CO2 levels were thousands of years ago? And how are they so sure in the accuracy of their tests?

In: Chemistry

3 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Ice cores typically.

In areas where it’s cold enough (Greeland and Antarctica) glaciers and the like have layers of ice like tree rings. Snow falls over the winter, melts during the summer, and freezes again creating a new layer.

Each layer has small teeny tiny bubbles or air trapped inside, like you see in ice cubes in the freezer.

They drill down and take up a long cylindical core of ice that can be several meters long. And the extract air from the layers in a clean room (a carefully sterilized room with limited outside particles, which were first created to measure how much lead was in the water and air). Once in the clean room they test the air and measure how much of each gas is present.

Once they get a sample they can test layers at similar depths from different locations worldwide and get an average.

They can do similar things with soil in warmer areas. In the spring, a melt happens bringing a lot of sediment down rivers which collects in lakes. This also collects in layers. They can measure that and look for the remains of algae and the like which feeds on CO2. The more of them they are, the more CO2 was in the air providing food. Which can confirm other results.

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