KANGERLUSSUAQ, GREENLAND - AUGUST 15: A view from the cockpit window onto meltwater lake from 'skier' LC-130 plane assigned to the NY Air National Guard's 109th Airlift Wing, flying over the Greenland ice sheet, Greenland, after departing the East Greenland Ice-Core Project (EastGRIP) site on August 15, 2022. The LC-130 is the largest ski aircraft in the world, capable of landing on snow and ice and conducting resupply missions, both in Antarctica during Northern Hemisphere winter and Greenland during the Northern Hemisphere summer months.The ski-equipped LC-130 is provided as in-kind support to EastGRIP by U.S. National Science Foundation. EastGRIP is an international science station on the Greenland ice sheet, the second-largest ice body in the world after the Antarctic ice cap. The team at EastGRIP, led by the University of Copenhagen in coordination with the Danish Centre for Ice and Climate and other partners, aims to drill through 2650 meters of ice dating back 80,000 years, to glean new knowledge of ice-sheet dynamics and how fast-flowing ice streams will contribute to sea-level rise. The resulting ice core will also create a new record of past climatic and atmospheric conditions from the northeastern part of the Greenland Ice Sheet, informing our understanding of how it may respond to a changing climate. This summer marked the first season of fieldwork since 2019, after the Covid-19 pandemic caused the cancellation of the 2020 and 2021 field seasons. After two months of preparation this spring, the drilling operation started on July 7th and ended on August 6th, yielding a new 300 meters of core and reaching a maximum depth of 2418.23 meters. That puts them under 250 meters from their target depth, which the team aims to achieve next year. (Photo by Lukasz Larsson Warzecha/Getty Images)