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The ice core, showing bits of sand and pebble.

Basal ice core with sand and pebbles.

Deepest Canadian ice core has reached bedrock

A University of Manitoba led research project has successfully recovered the deepest ice core in Canadian history.

May 26, 2025 — 

An ambitious Canadian flagship project has reached a major milestone, successfully drilling a 613-metre-deep ice core through the Müller Ice Cap to bedrock on Axel Heiberg Island, Nunavut. This is now the deepest ice core ever extracted in Canada and promises to reveal vital insights into the Arctic’s climatic past.

A group of researchers celebrating the retrieval of the Muller ice cap.

The bedrock celebration (left to right: Tessa, Iben, Jamie, Julien, Rebecca, Nicholas, Anais, Alison, Nerilie, Fei, Bo, Richard and Etienne).

Over several weeks, the drill team extracted the ice core in 2-3 metre sections in harsh climatic conditions. The operation concluded on May 16, 2025 when drillers began recovering sand and pebbles in the ice core sections – clear evidence that they had reached bedrock!

“It has logistically been a challenging project, so I am so excited to successfully retrieve the ice core from Müller,” said project lead Dr. Dorthe Dahl-Jensen, a Canada Excellence Research Chair in Arctic Ice, Freshwater Marine Coupling, and Climate Change.

The Müller Ice Cap Project is a University of Manitoba led Canadian research initiative that brings together scientists from Canada, Denmark, and Australia. Its goal is to reconstruct detailed records of Arctic climate and sea ice conditions stretching back more than 10,000 years. The results could provide key insights into future changing conditions in the Canadian Arctic.

A series of tents and people set up along the international flag line in the Arctic climate.

International flag line.

Beyond revealing changes in Arctic climate over millennia, researchers also hope to determine whether the ice cap contains ice from the vast ice sheet covering North America during the last ice age.

The ice core segments have been transported to the Canadian Ice Core Laboratory in Edmonton, where scientific analysis will begin this fall.

Congratulations to the research team on this momentous achievement!

Project lead, Dorthe Dahl-Jensen studying a brown layer in the ice core.

Project lead, Dorthe Dahl-Jensen studying a brown layer in the ice core.

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