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MIT Technology Review·Research·4d ago·by Tim Kalvelage·~1 min read

Digging for clues about the North Pole’s past

Digging for clues about the North Pole’s past To understand what the future holds for Earth’s northernmost waters, scientists are burrowing deep below the seabed. In the past, even with an icebreaker and during peak melt season, getting to the North Pole wasn’t a sure bet. It took favorable winds to crack the frozen ocean surface, and ships had to fight through ice that had grown many meters thick over several winters. In the summer of 2025, though, Jochen Knies from the Arctic University of Norway, Tromsø, and his team met little resistance on their way to 90 degrees North with the research vessel Kronprins Haakon. The geologist “didn’t hear the usual grinding of ice” against the hull that he remembered from 1996, when he first reached the pole by ship. Instead, thin floes and large stretches of open water…

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