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Pioneering French scientist Claude Lorius dies at 91

Claude Lorius, a leading glaciologist whose expeditions helped prove that humans were responsible for global warming, died at 91.

Glaciologist Claude Lorius, seen here in Paris in 2011, once said: “I did not choose science, I chose adventure”© Getty Images

He led 22 expeditions to Greenland and Antarctica during his lifetime.

During one trip to Antarctica in 1965, an evening of whiskey with ice cubes led him to prove humankind’s role in heating the Earth’s surface.

Lorius died on Tuesday morning in the French region of Burgundy.

It was his love of adventure which set him on the path to identifying and predicting an impending catastrophe for the planet.

In 1956, just out of university, he joined an expedition to Antarctica. Temperatures there were as low as -40C (-40F).

Despite this, Lorius and two others lived there for two years, surviving with limited supplies and a faulty radio.

The more polar expeditions he led to the continent, the more he became fascinated with Antarctica’s mysteries.

In 1965, Lorius had a revelation by gathering ice samples and dropping them in whiskey. He spoke about it half a century later.

“One evening, after deep drilling, in our caravan we drank a glass of whiskey in which we had put ice cubes of old ice,” he said.

“Seeing the bubbles of air sparkling in our glasses, I came to the idea that they were samples of the atmosphere trapped in the ice.”

Realising the scientific potential of analysing trapped air, he then decided to study ice cores – samples drilled out of the ice which act as frozen time capsules.

By drilling into the ice, Lorius drilled into the past, penetrating, in his words, the “ice of the first Ice Age”.

His research showed that while carbon dioxide had varied slightly, after the Industrial Revolution concentrations of the greenhouse gas had rocketed as temperatures rose.

The French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) said this left “no room for doubt” that global warming was due to man made pollution.

From then on he became a campaigner and in 1988 he was the inaugural expert of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

In 2002, he was awarded the CNRS gold medal along with his colleague Jean Jouzel.

Lorius was also the first Frenchmen to receive the prestigious Blue Planet Prize.

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