A team of scientists has shown that rapid CO2 release from the ocean around Antarctica helped end the last ice age.

The findings published in the journal Nature, found that CO 2 was stored in the deep Southern Ocean during the last ice age and then released into the atmosphere as the ice age ended, linked to pulses of rapid climate change and melting sea ice.

The new study, led by Dr James Rae from the School of Environmental and Earth Sciences at the University of St Andrews, provides crucial evidence of the processes that controlled CO 2 and climate during ice ages. Although scientists have long-known that CO 2 rise helped end the last ice age, its cause has remained a mystery.

Lead researcher Dr Rae said: “Many scientists suspected that the ocean round Antarctica was responsible for changing CO 2 levels during ice ages, but there’s not previously been data that directly proved this.”

Using samples of fossil deep sea corals, brought up from 1000 metres below the sea surface, Dr Rae and his team made chemical measurements that allowed them to reconstruct the CO 2 content of the deep ocean.

The researchers found that the deep ocean CO 2 record was the “mirror image” of CO 2 in the atmosphere, with the ocean storing CO 2 during an ice age and releasing it back to the atmosphere during deglaciation.

Co-author, Professor Laura Robinson from the University of Bristol’s School of Earth Sciences, collected the samples from the Southern Ocean. She added: “CO 2 rise during the last ice age occurs in a series of steps and jumps associated with intervals of rapid climate change.

“Deep sea corals capture information about these climate changes in the chemistry of their skeletons but are hard to find.”

To bring back these important samples, the team spent months in the freezing waters of the Drake Passage, between South America and Antarctica.

Dr Andrea Burke from the University of St Andrews, who was part of the mission, said: “Most people think of corals as tropical creatures, but they also live deep beneath the waves in some of the world’s most extreme deep-sea environments.”

As well as helping scientists better understand the ice ages, the new findings also provide context to current CO 2 rise and climate change.

Dr Rae added: “Although the CO 2 rise that helped end the last ice age was dramatic in geological terms, CO 2 rise due to human activity over the last 100 years is even larger and about 100 times faster.