We helped fill a major climate change knowledge gap, thanks to 130,000-year-old sediment in Sydney lakes
- Written by: Alexander Francke, Research Fellow, University of Adelaide
Lake Couridjah, Thirlmere Lakes National Park in New South WalesShutterstockPlants capture around half the carbon we emit by burning fossil fuels, making them a crucial part of mitigating climate change. But carbon is often released back into the atmosphere when plants die, decompose and eventually turn into dirt.
Carbon is only permanently removed...





















