> The storage facility is normally chilled to –37°C. But the equipment failure allowed temperatures to rise to 40°C,<p><a href="https://www.ualberta.ca/news-and-events/newsarticles/2017/april/freezer-failure-results-in-damage-to-ice-core-collection" rel="nofollow">https://www.ualberta.ca/news-and-events/newsarticles/2017/ap...</a><p>There's more details about the causes of the failure at that URL:<p>> the refrigeration chillers shut down due to “high head pressure” conditions. Essentially, the chillers were not able to reject their heat through the condenser water system—heat instead of cold circulated through the freezer.<p>> Compounding matters, the system monitoring the freezer temperatures failed due to a database corruption. The freezer’s computer system was actually sending out alarm signals that the temperature was rising, but those signals never made it to the university’s service provider or the on-campus control centre.
tl;dr University of Alberta's Edmonton cold storage facility suffered a freezer unit failure. This melted 180 ice cores, 13% of the whole collection. Each may cost 5e5-1e6 dollars to replace.