Research
Professor André Berger
Université Catholique de Louvain
Institut d'Astronomie et de Géophysique G. Lemaître
Chemin du Cyclotron 2
B-1348 LOUVAIN-LA-NEUVE
Phone: +32 (0)10 47 33 03
Fax: +32 (0)10 47 47 22
E-mail: berger@astr.ucl.ac.be
Dr Hubert Gallée
Université Catholique de Louvain
Institut d'Astronomie et de Géophysique G. Lemaître
Chemin du Cyclotron, 2
B-1348 LOUVAIN-LA-NEUVE
Phone: +32 (0)10 47 33 02
Fax: +32 (0)10 47 47 22
E-mail: galle@astr.ucl.ac.be
This study makes part of the EPICA project (European Project for Ice Coring in Antarctica) which falls under the international research effort developed during the last decades in order to try to put forward a scientific response to the problems of the global climatic changes.
The two large polar ice caps of Greenland and the Antarctic are privileged actors of the global climate system. Not only their high capability to reflect the solar radiation influences the balance of the energy reaching the surface of the Earth, but they can contribute, by their possible melting, to the rise of the average sea level. These polar ice caps also constitute a record of the climatic system insofar as they register and preserve within their ices the past climatic variations.
The project intends to contribute to tasks specifically identified in the EPICA scientific plan. It relates primarily to the development of a climatology (characteristics of the climate, here the current climate) of the Atlantic and Indian sectors of Antarctica established on the basis of the application of a regional climatic model (RCM). This climatology is expected to bring new elements in the knowledge of the spatial distribution of the climatic parameters specific to the above-mentioned areas, and to contribute thus to the process of interpretation of the palaeoenvironmental signals extracted from EPICA ice cores. It has as an additional aim to develop a function "surface mass balance" which will be made available to glaciologists modellers participating in EPICA research-work.
The global objective of EPICA is to carry out a continuous and high resolution reconstruction of the global climate and past environmental changes, from the scale of the century to the scale of several hundreds of thousands of years, on the grounds of the analysis of ice cores sampled by deep drilling.
Two great stages of drilling are envisaged.
The first, currently ongoing, relates to the central part of the
Antarctic cap, namely the zone of Dome Concorde. The second targets
the Atlantic sector of the cap, namely the Queen Maud Land. The final
site will be selected according to the results obtained at Dome Concorde.
The objectives of this research are the following :