This will be done using a field of science known as palaeoecology, which is the study of past ecosystems and environments.
In palaeoecology, scientists use biological and non-biological materials (such as fossils, lake sediments and ice cores) to indicate what the environment might have been like many years ago. We aim to use this information to set targets for the restoration of biodiversity in Surrey.
In this blog, Ben provides his first report from the field.
In early May, myself and a team of researchers from University College London (UCL) collected two sediment cores from ponds on Chobham Common. The ponds that we chose to take the cores from have existed on the Common for a few hundred years, forming part of a central wet heath area that was visible on old maps dating from the 1800s. In order to take the samples, a long tube of around three inches in diameter is pushed down into the base of the pond, deep into the sediment, until it can’t be pushed down any further. A hydraulic seal is created before the tube is raised up back to the boat, in order to make sure the sample does not fall out the bottom of the tube. After the core is safely brought to dry land, it is cut into 1cm slices, which are bagged up for analysis back at the labs later on.
Take a look at the video below to see us in action on the Common, and hear a little bit more about how palaeoecology works from UCL’s Professor Helen Bennion.