'Willi Dansgaard' (born
1922) is a
Danish paleoclimatologist. He is Professor Emeritus of Geophysics at the
University of Copenhagen and a member of the
Royal Danish Academy of Science and Letters, the
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, the
Icelandic Academy of Sciences, and the
Danish Geophysical Society.
Overview
He was the first paleoclimatologist to demonstrate that measurements of the trace isotopes
oxygen-18 and
deuterium in accumulated
glacier ice could be used as an indicator of past climate. Dansgaard was the first to note deuterium excess, or a water sample's deviation from the global meteoric water line (GMWL) in ice cores. He found that the kinetic differences between hydrogen-1 and deuterium related to the temperature of source water, and the absolute humidity.
In
1966 he took part in the first polar deep ice core drilling expedition, the American
Camp Century ice core from
Greenland. Dansgaard also took a leading role drilling the first ice core to bedrock, 1400 km away from the Camp Century core at Dye 3. Analyses from this core, showed rapid climate change, during and at the end of the last ice known as
Dansgaard-Oeschger events.
Awards
★
Tyler Prize for Environmental Achievement,
1996
★
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences Crafoord Prize, 1995
★
International Glaciological Society's
Seligman Crystal
★
Swedish Society of Geography and Anthropology's
Vega medal
External links
★ http://content.aip.org/products/esva/Dansgaard_Willi.html - photo of Dansgaard,
Chester C. Langway and
Hans Oeschger
★ http://isis.ku.dk/kurser/blob.aspx?feltid=60066 - Professor Willi Dansgaard, 'Frozen Annals, Greenland Ice Sheet Research' free pdf download of this inspiring 2005 autobiography by the pioneer of Greenland Ice Core drilling. Hard copies of the book were only printed in limited numbers and are not generally for sale.
★ http://calspace.ucsd.edu/virtualmuseum/climatechange2/07_2.shtml