Advection and non-climate impacts on the South Pole Ice Core
-
Published:2020-05-07
Issue:3
Volume:16
Page:819-832
-
ISSN:1814-9332
-
Container-title:Climate of the Past
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Clim. Past
Author:
Fudge Tyler J., Lilien David A.ORCID, Koutnik Michelle, Conway HowardORCID, Stevens C. MaxORCID, Waddington Edwin D., Steig Eric J.ORCID, Schauer Andrew J., Holschuh NicholasORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The South Pole Ice Core (SPICEcore), which spans the past 54 300 years, was
drilled far from an ice divide such that ice recovered at depth originated
upstream of the core site. If the climate is different upstream, the climate
history recovered from the core will be a combination of the upstream
conditions advected to the core site and temporal changes. Here, we evaluate
the impact of ice advection on two fundamental records from SPICEcore:
accumulation rate and water isotopes. We determined past locations of ice
deposition based on GPS measurements of the modern velocity field spanning
100 km upstream, where ice of ∼20 ka age would likely have
originated. Beyond 100 km, there are no velocity measurements, but ice
likely originates from Titan Dome, an additional 90 km distant. Shallow
radar measurements extending 100 km upstream from the core site reveal large
(∼20 %) variations in accumulation but no significant
trend. Water isotope ratios, measured at 12.5 km intervals for the first 100 km
of the flowline, show a decrease with elevation of
−0.008 ‰ m−1 for δ18O. Advection adds
approximately 1 ‰ for δ18O to the
Last Glacial Maximum (LGM)-to-modern change. We also use an existing ensemble of continental
ice-sheet model runs to assess the ice-sheet elevation change through time.
The magnitude of elevation change is likely small and the sign uncertain.
Assuming a lapse rate of 10 ∘C km−1 of elevation, the inference
of LGM-to-modern temperature change is ∼1.4 ∘C
smaller than if the flow from upstream is not considered.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Paleontology,Stratigraphy,Global and Planetary Change
Reference55 articles.
1. Alley, R. B., Meese, D. A., Shuman, C. A., Gow, A. J., Taylor, K. C., Grootes,
P. M., White, J. W. C., Ram, M., Waddington, E. D., Mayewski, P. A., and
Zielinski, G. A.: Abrupt increase in Greenland snow accumulation at the end
of the Younger Dryas event, Nature, 362, 527–529, 1993. 2. Briggs, R. D., Pollard, D., and Tarasov, L.: A data-constrained large ensemble
analysis of Antarctic evolution since the
Eemian, Quaternary Sci. Rev., 103, 91–115, 2014. 3. Casey, K. A., Fudge, T. J., Neumann, T. A., Steig, E. J., Cavitte, M. G. P., and
Blankenship, D. D.: The 1500 m South Pole ice core: recovering a 40 ka
environmental record, Ann. Glaciol., 55, 137–146, 2014. 4. Cuffey, K. M. and Clow, G. D.: Temperature, accumulation, and ice sheet
elevation in central Greenland through the last deglacial
transition, J. Geophys. Res.-Oceans, 102, 26383–26396, 1997. 5. Cuffey, K. M. and Paterson, W. S. B.: The Physics of Glacier, Fourth Edition, Elsevier, Burlington MA, 01803 USA, 2010.
Cited by
9 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|