Anna Nele Meckler is a professor of Earth Sciences at the University of Bergen, and is also affiliated with the Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research. She specialises in paleoceanography and paleoclimatology, and leads multiple grants to develop new techniques to reconstruct past temperatures, most importantly clumped isotope thermometry. By analysing speleothems Meckler's team can identify how past levels of CO2 in the atmosphere correlate with temperature changes, which gives essential knowledge for predicting future climate change.[1]
In 2015, Meckler won an ERC Starting Grant[3] and moved to the University of Bergen, where she has been since, first as a researcher, then as an Associate Professor and Full Professor. She currently holds both an ERC Consolidator and a Norwegian Research Council grant to further her research.
2021–2026: DOTpaleo: Deep Ocean Temperatures in the Paleogene Greenhouse. Funded by the Research Council of Norway (12 million NOK)[5]
2021–2026: FluidMICS: Fluid Inclusion Microthermometry in Speleothems. Funded by the European Research Council (ERC Consolidator Grant, €2 million). The FluidMICS project studies "stalagmites in tropical caves, where tiny drops of water are preserved from the time when the water dripped from the cave ceiling".[6]
2017–2021: T-TRAC: Tropical Temperature Reconstruction Across 0.5 million years from Cave formations. Funded by the Norwegian Research Council.[7]
2015–2020: ERC Starting Grant. Reconstructions of past climate using ocean sediments and cave rock (stalagmite) as archives" [8]