Liz Thomas is a British climate scientist, specializing in paleoclimatology.
Her research mainly focuses on historic climate variability in the Antarctic, and she oversees the British Antarctic Survey's work on collecting and studying ice cores.
Thomas primarily conducts research on paleoclimatology, making extensive use of ice cores to study historic climate change in the Southern Hemisphere, particularly the Antarctic[1][2][3] After graduating from the University of Southampton, she obtained a Ph.D. in paleoclimatology through the Open University, joining the British Antarctic Survey as part of her doctoral work in the early 2000s.
[4][5] She subsequently became the director of the British Antarctic Survey's ice core group, which conducts research using ice core samples in the Arctic and Antarctic.
[8][10] Notably, Thomas led research to compile the first comprehensive record of snowfall in the Antarctic going back centuries,[11][12] which showed an increase in snowfall in the continent over that period.