Dansgaard grew up in Copenhagen, to parents who owned an
engraving shop. In 1947, he graduated from the
University of Copenhagen, winning a gold medal for his thesis on X-ray
dosimetry. After several years of research, including some at sites in
Greenland, Dansgaard returned to the
University of Copenhagen's Biophysics Laboratory, where he developed its
mass spectrometer to analyse water
isotopes. According to his student
Jørgen Peder Steffensen: In June 1952, Dansgaard made a discovery that came to influence the rest of his scientific career. He discovered that it was possible to determine the temperature of the precipitating clouds by analysing the stable isotopic composition of rain water. In the following 12 years, he systematically collected water samples from all over the world in collaboration with the
Danish East Asia Company, contacts in Greenland, a French expedition under
Paul Emile Victor and later the
International Atomic Energy Agency and
World Meteorological Organization. == Overview ==