Antarctica: Ice and Sky

Antarctica: Ice and Sky

Tuesday, September 3, 2019 - 6:30pm to 8:00pm
  • Library Hall
A film about climate change, a scientist's life work and the French glaciologist who foresaw global warming

From Lud Jacquet, theOscar-winning director of March of the Penguins, comes a stirring portrait of French glaciologist, Claude Lorius, whose groundbreaking research in Antarctica gave us the first clear evidence of man-made global climate change. Lorius discovered his destiny as a college student when he joined an expedition to Antarctica in 1955; land essentially untouched by scientific experiment. He would go on to participate in 22 expeditions during his long career, facing unforgiving conditions and brutal personal challenges that were rewarded with an amazing discovery: using ice cores thousands of meters deep, tiny air bubbles suspended in the ice reveal the composition of the planet’s atmosphere over nearly a million years. Through remarkable archival footage and stunning drone cinematography, Antarctica: Ice and Sky is an epic tale where science and adventure meet, equal parts contemplative memoir and an ardent call to action.

Run Time: 

90 minutes
In my lifetime I have seen how man, by burning oil, wood and coal, has been changing the earth’s climate. I traveled back thousands of years to check whether what I’d discovered wasn’t just a quirk of nature.
French explorer & scientist Claude Lorius