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Quaternary Environments Ice Cores

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... e 68m at Camp Century, Greenland and 100m Vostok, Antarctica. Stable Isotope ... Changing resolution back in time from the Camp Century ice core from Greenland ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Quaternary Environments Ice Cores


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Quaternary EnvironmentsIce Cores
2
Records From Ice Cores
  • Precipitation
  • Air Temperature
  • Atmospheric Composition
  • Gaseous composition
  • Soluble and insoluble particles
  • Volcanic Eruptions
  • Solar Activity

3
Records From Ice Cores
4
Extent of Ice Core Sampling
  • 15 Ice cores extend into the last glaciation
  • Greenland
  • Antarctica
  • China
  • Few Mid-Latitude high elevation cores

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Paleoclimatic Information From Ice Cores
  • Stable isotopes of water and the atmospheric O2
  • Other gases from air bubbles in the ice
  • Dissolved and particulate matter in firn and ice
  • The physical characteristics of the firn and ice

9
Definitions
  • Snow Crystals Form of snow as it falls
  • Firn Snow that has survived the summer ablation
    season
  • Ice The produce of metamorphosis as firn is
    buried by subsequent snow accumulation
  • Depth varies depending upon surface temperature
    and accumulation rate
  • i.e 68m at Camp Century, Greenland and 100m
    Vostok, Antarctica

10
Stable Isotope Analysis
  • Basic Premise Molecules with heavier isotopes
    will stay at the source during evaporation
  • HD16O or H218O
  • Various things control isotopic concentration
  • Temperature
  • Evaporation
  • Distance from source
  • Compared to the Standard Mean Ocean Water (SMOW)
  • Equivalent to water collected from 200-500m depth
    in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans

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Complications
  • 18O content of precipitation depends on
  • 18O content of water vapor from the source
  • Amount of moisture in the air at source
  • Evaporation en route to deposition
  • Source of land evaporation
  • Temperature at which evaporation and condensation
    takes place
  • Extent to which clouds become supersaturated

13
Empirical Evidence
  • Studies show that despite the complications
    geographical and temporal variations in isotopes
    do occur, reflecting temperature effects due to
    changing
  • latitudes,
  • altitude,
  • distance from moisture source,
  • season,
  • long-term climatic fluctuations.

14
Dating of Ice Cores
  • Determine the age-depth relationship
  • Very accurate time scales for at least 10,000 to
    12,000 years
  • Radioisotopic Methods
  • 10Be
  • 14C
  • 39Ar
  • 81Kr
  • 210Pb

15
Dating of Ice Cores
  • AMS 14C Dating
  • CO2 from air bubbles
  • 10kg of sample
  • Equivalent to 1.5m length of ice core
  • Problems
  • CO2 exchange with the atmosphere is an open
    system until the air bubbles are cut off from the
    surface

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Annual Layers
  • Can count visual annual fluctuation in the ice
    caused by melt and thaw layers
  • Various Markers
  • Visual stratigraphy
  • Electrical conductivity measurements (ECM)
  • Laser light scattering (from dust)
  • Oxygen isotopes
  • Chemical variations
  • GISP2 and GRIP match back to 15,000 years with
    200 year precision

26
Resolution
  • lt1 error back to 2,000 BP,
  • 2 by 40,000 BP,
  • 10 by 57,000 BP,
  • up to 20 by 110,000 BP

27
Seasonal Variations
  • Microparticulate matter and ice chemistry
  • Major ions
  • Trace elements
  • High Spring values and low Autumn values produce
    seasonal variations
  • Sodium, Calcium, Nitrate, Chloride
  • Electrical Conductivity Measurements (ECM)
  • Continuous record of acidity
  • Volcanic eruptions high
  • Alkaline dust low

28
Changing resolution back in time from the Camp
Century ice core from Greenland
29
Site A, Central Greenland
30
Electrical Conductivity Measurements
31
Acidity of annual layers from A.D. 553 to A.D.
1972
32
Accumulation at Summit, Greenland
33
Theoretical Models
  • Calculated ice-age at depth by means of a
    theoretical ice-flow model
  • Depend upon
  • Past changes in ice thickness
  • Temperature
  • Accumulation rates
  • Flow patterns
  • And ice rheology
  • Problems minimized at ice divides (Grip core at
    Summit, Greenland) or deep cores that are still
    well above ground level (Vostok, Antarctica)

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Schematic Diagram of Isotopic Depletion
35
Stratigraphic Correlations
  • Correlation of multiple proxy records from ice
    cores against records with better chronological
    control (i.e. d18O from benthic foraminifera)
  • Danger of correlating events and onset of
    circular reasoning

36
Vostok Core, Antarctica
  • Longest well-resolved ice-core record on Earth
    and a yardstick for comparison with other
    paleoclimatic records
  • Deuterium records compared with SPECMAP d18O
    records suggest that the Vostok core extend back
    426,000 years spanning the last four glacial
    events
  • SPECMAP Data
  • (1) quantitative data on planktonic species and
    assemblages which reflect conditions in the
    surface waters of the Atlantic ocean
  • (2) measurements of 180, 13C difference
    (planktonic and benthic), and Cd/Ca.

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Climate Changes
  • The rate and cause of climatic changes is of
    great interest
  • Resolution is an important factor in determining
    rates of change

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Shear in Ice Records
  • Differential forces at depth in the glaciers
    cause the ice to flow distorting the record
  • Boudinage Pinching of a layer that is less
    likely to flow compared to the surrounding layers
  • Ice strength is dependent upon dust content

41
Atmospheric Composition
  • Ice cores are archives of atmospheric composition
  • Contain records of greenhouse gases
  • Carbon Dioxide, Methane, Nitrous Oxide
  • Air mass Characteristics
  • Volcanic Eruptions
  • Changes in Dust content

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Greenhouse Gases
  • Methane is 220 greater today than 250 years ago
  • Carbon Dioxide is 130 pre-industrial levels
  • Nitrous Oxide is 110 greater than 250 years ago
  • All levels are far higher than anything seen in
    the last 220,000 years

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Volcanic Eruptions from Ice Cores
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