For many years, the media has covered my work and that of graduate students and collegues working with me. Below is a sampling of some of those news stories showing how our work is relevant to society.
Felicia Combs and Lynette Charles interview Paul Bierman about our team's findings in the Christ et al. 2021 Science paper.
CNN's Michael Holmes speaks with Paul Bierman, Professor of Natural Resources at the University of Vermont, about a study of "ice cores" in Greenland - and its implications for billions of people living along the world's coastlines.
Some 400,000 years ago, Greenland was, well, green, scientists say. According to a new study released Thursday, the massive island was an ice-free tundra landscape – perhaps covered by trees.
Samples, lost for decades, rediscovered in Danish freezer.
Glacier retreat causing U.S. capital region to drop.
The land where the U.S. capital sits could be underwater in the distant future, according to a new study that found the Washington, D.C., area will sink more than previously thought over the next 80,000 years. EPA/MICHAEL REYNOLDS
Lake sediment cores show that storminess has changed over time in New England on a 3000 year cycle.
Paul Bierman and Josh Galster remove a core from a frozen lake in Vermont. Anders Noren photograph.
You can reach me at pbierman@uvm.edu or paulrbierman@gmail.com, by text at (802) 238-6826, and by mail at the University of Vermont, 180 Colchester Avenue, Delehanty Hall, Burlington, VT 05405.