Swiss-Led Team Recovers Record-Breaking Sediment Core from Antarctica
An international research team, co-led by ETH Zurich and the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (WSL), has retrieved a 228-metre sediment core from beneath the Antarctic ice sheet, the longest ever recovered. The core will help scientists predict the effects of global warming on future sea levels.

Key Takeaways
- A research team has retrieved a 228-metre sediment core from beneath the Antarctic ice sheet.
- The previous record for a sediment core drilled beneath an ice sheet was less than ten metres.
- The sediment layers in the core could date back as far as 23 million years.
- The project involved a 29-member team from ten countries.
- Two previous attempts to extract a core of this length had failed.
By The Numbers
They Said
"The drill core will help scientists better predict how global warming could affect future sea levels."
"A central question is whether a rise of two degrees above preâindustrial temperatures would be enough to trigger a retreat."