Go to content
  • cecnewsNews
  • cecPublicationsPublications
  • cecResearchResearch
  • cecInfrastructureInfrastructure
  • cecCruiseCruise logs
  • cecsitemapAbout

CAGE (2013-2023) has ended. To view our reports, publications, and database, please visit the CAGE Report Series website.

Alt Text! Centre for Arctic Gas Hydrate,
Environment and Climate

Open menu

Only ten institutions in the world have a mass spectrometer of this kind.

CAGE installs new mass spectrometer

Tromsø will soon be one of few places in the world where scientists can analyze clumped isotopes. The groundbreaking method allows for more precise reconstruction of past climate changes, and will be performed with the new mass spectrometer currently being installed at CAGE.

Text: Maja Sojtaric

Centre for Arctic Gas Hydrate, Environment and Climate at UiT The Arctic University of Norway will this fall finalize installation of a new mass spectrometer. The instrument will eventually enable scientists to do analysis of so called clumped isotopes, a method that makes, among other parameters, carbon dating much more precise.

This relatively new method is a game changer when it comes to precise measurements of temperatures of the past. This makes reconstruction of past climate (paleoclimate) more accurate.

In short it is the best thermometer we have for interpreting past climate change.

“Not only that,” says associate professor Giuliana Panieri, “it was recently discovered that this type of analysis is useful for detecting the natural sources of methane.”

Methane is one of the most powerful greenhouse gases and influences current global warming through both natural emissions as well as emissions from human activities. There are three potential sources of methane in the Arctic: biogenic, thermogenic and abiotic. Defining the source makes it possible to figure out how methane is formed and distributed: through the decomposition of organic matter or through reactions between the earth´s crust and the mantel. That in turn helps scientists account for amounts of this highly potent climate gas, which may be hidden beneath the seabed in the Arctic Ocean.

“Isotopic measurements are the base of various climate investigations that we conduct at CAGE. They help us reconstruct environmental and climate conditions of the past. They also can help as define if there were methane emissions from the ocean floor in the past, and where they occurred.” says Panieri.

 

The newly appointed manager of the Mass Spec. Laboratory PhD Matteus Lindgren is showing some hardware of the MAT 253 Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometer to Assoc. prof, Giuliana Panieri, laboratory manager Trine Dahl and Director of CAGE Jürgen Mienert.
The newly appointed manager of the Mass Spec. Laboratory PhD Matteus Lindgren is showing some hardware of the MAT 253 Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometer to Assoc. prof, Giuliana Panieri, laboratory manager Trine Dahl and Director of CAGE Jürgen Mienert.

A similar instrument is also planned to be installed at University of Bergen, making Norway the only country in Europe that will have two mass spectrometer laboratories of this kind.

“We will contribute with an exchange of experience with our colleagues in Bergen. These instruments will provide Norway with cutting edge tools for climate research in decades to come.” says CAGE director Jürgen Mienert.

Only ten places in the world have a mass spectrometer of this kind.
Only ten institutions in the world have a mass spectrometer of this kind. Caltech, USA; University of California, USA; Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, MIT, USA; Department of Earth and Space Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, USA; Harvard University, Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences, USA; University of Chicago, Dept. of the Geophysical Sciences, USA; Imperial College, London, UK; Geological Institute, ETH Zürich, Switzerland; Research Center for Environmental Changes,(Academia Sinica, Taipei, (Taiwan) And CAGE – Centre for Arctic Gas Hydrate, Environment and Climate at UiT The Arctic University of Norway.

 

 

 

13. August 2015

News

Deployment. Observatory. Svalbard. Photo: A. Silyakova

26. August 2015

Methane observatories successfully deployed in the Arctic

Gruppebilde_besøkNGU_mai15_featured

24. June 2015

CAGE director visits new laboratory in Trondheim

News archive

CAGE, Centre for Arctic Gas Hydrate, Environment and Climate

  • Research areas
  • People
  • Job openings
  • About us
  • News Archive
  • Privacy Policy
  • Home

cage@ig.uit.no

Facebook

Twitter

 

Naturfagbygget
Dramsveien 201
9010 Tromsø

 

Go to map

NGU_hovedlogo_svart_full_engelsk
sfflogonegEng_svart
  • 2026 © CAGE, Centre for Arctic Gas Hydrate, Environment and Climate – UiT The Arctic University of Norway
  • Privacy Policy
  • Design and development: Gnist Design

CAGE, Centre for Arctic Gas Hydrate, Environment and Climate Centre for Arctic Gas Hydrate,
Environment and Climate

Close menu
  • cecnewsNews
  • cecPublicationsPublications
  • cecResearchResearch
  • cecInfrastructureInfrastructure
  • cecCruiseCruise logs
  • cecsitemapAbout
    • Annual Reports
    • Centre Board
    • Scientific Advisory Committee
    • Research School
    • Past Events/PhD Defenses
    • Employees
    • Job openings
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.