
View of the GRIP site
The 'Greenland Ice Core Project' (GRIP) was a multinational
European research project, organised through the
European Science Foundation. Funding came from 8 nations (
Belgium,
Denmark,
France,
Germany,
Iceland,
Italy,
Switzerland, and
United Kingdom), and from the
European Union. GRIP successfully drilled a 3028 metre
ice core to the bed of the
Greenland Ice Sheet at Summit, Central
Greenland from
1989 to
1992 at .

A portion of the core
Studies of
isotopes and various atmospheric constituents in the core have revealed a detailed record of
climatic variations reaching more than 100,000 years back in time. The results indicate that
Holocene climate has been remarkably stable and have confirmed the occurrence of rapid climatic variation during the last ice age (the
Wisconsin). Delta-O-18 variations observed in the core part believed to date from the
Eemian interglacial have not been confirmed by other records
[1] including the
NGRIP core and are now believed not to represent climate events: the Eemian appears to have been as stable as the Holocene.
See also
★
GISP
★
EPICA
★
Dansgaard-Oeschger event
External links
★
GRIP page from ESF
★
GRIP info from the
NCDC
★
GRIP publications list