Greenland's receding icecap to expose top-secret US nuclear project
Greenland's receding icecap to expose top-secret US nuclear project
Camp Century part of Project Iceworm is underground cold war network that had been thought buried forever, until climate change made that highly unlikely
Jon Henley
@jonhenley
Tuesday 27 September 2016 14.06 EDT
A top-secret US military project from the cold war and the toxic waste it conceals, thought to have been buried forever beneath the Greenland icecap, are likely to be uncovered by rising temperatures within decades, scientists have said.
The US army engineering corps excavated Camp Century in 1959 around 200km (124 miles) from the coast of Greenland, which was then a county of Denmark.
Powered, remarkably, by the worlds first mobile nuclear generator and known as the city under the ice, the camps three-kilometre network of tunnels, eight metres beneath the ice, housed laboratories, a shop, a hospital, a cinema, a chapel and accommodation for as many as 200 soldiers.
Its personnel were officially stationed there to test Arctic construction methods and carry out research. Scientists based at the camp did, indeed, drill the first ice core samples ever used to study the earths climate, obtaining data still cited today, according to William Colgan, a climate and glacier scientist from the Lassonde school of engineering at Torontos York University, and the lead author of the study.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/sep/27/receding-icecap-top-secret-us-nuclear-project-greenland-camp-century-project-iceworm