Mean chemical characteristics and volcano signatures of ice cores from Belukha, the Everest and three Svalbard sites


Autoria(s): Moore, John C; Beaudon, Emilie; Kang, Shichang; Divine, D; Isaksson, Elisabeth; Pohjola, Veijo A; van de Wal, Roderik S W
Cobertura

MEDIAN LATITUDE: 56.000200 * MEDIAN LONGITUDE: 49.623100 * SOUTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 28.030000 * WEST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 13.270000 * NORTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 79.970000 * EAST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 86.980000 * DATE/TIME START: 1995-01-01T00:00:00 * DATE/TIME END: 2005-01-01T00:00:00

Data(s)

24/07/2012

Resumo

Ice cores from outside the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets are difficult to date because of seasonal melting and multiple sources (terrestrial, marine, biogenic and anthropogenic) of sulfates deposited onto the ice. Here we present a method of volcanic sulfate extraction that relies on fitting sulfate profiles to other ion species measured along the cores in moving windows in log space. We verify the method with a well dated section of the Belukha ice core from central Eurasia. There are excellent matches to volcanoes in the preindustrial, and clear extraction of volcanic peaks in the post-1940 period when a simple method based on calcium as a proxy for terrestrial sulfate fails due to anthropogenic sulfate deposition. We then attempt to use the same statistical scheme to locate volcanic sulfate horizons within three ice cores from Svalbard and a core from Mount Everest. Volcanic sulfate is <5% of the sulfate budget in every core, and differences in eruption signals extracted reflect the large differences in environment between western, northern and central regions of Svalbard. The Lomonosovfonna and Vestfonna cores span about the last 1000 years, with good extraction of volcanic signals, while Holtedahlfonna which extends to about AD1700 appears to lack a clear record. The Mount Everest core allows clean volcanic signal extraction and the core extends back to about AD700, slightly older than a previous flow model has suggested. The method may thus be used to extract historical volcanic records from a more diverse geographical range than hitherto.

Formato

application/zip, 2 datasets

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.817167

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.817167

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Moore, John C; Beaudon, Emilie; Kang, Shichang; Divine, D; Isaksson, Elisabeth; Pohjola, Veijo A; van de Wal, Roderik S W (2012): Statistical extraction of volcanic sulphate from nonpolar ice cores. Journal of Geophysical Research, 117(D3), D03306, doi:10.1029/2011JD016592

Palavras-Chave #[NH4]+; [NO3]-; [SO4]2-; # = given as 0.1.1 µeq/l in article; 1963 radioactivity layer depth; Abbrev; Abbreviation; Age; Ammonium; Ca2+; Calcium cation; Chloride anion; Cl-; Date/Time; DATE/TIME; Datum level; DEPTH, ice/snow; Depth, relative; Depth ice/snow; Depth rel; Diff; Difference; DL; drill depth; Elevation; ELEVATION; Eruption; Event; Glac ice thick; Glacier; Ice thickness, glacier; International Polar Year (2007-2008); in years; eruption date minus model dating; IPY; modelled date; Nitrate ion; Penetration depth; Penetr depth; Sulfate ion; volcano; Year of eruption
Tipo

Dataset