scholarly journals Rapid changes in ice core gas records – Part 1: On the accuracy of methane synchronisation of ice cores

2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 1453-1471 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Köhler

Abstract. Methane synchronisation is a concept to align ice core records during rapid climate changes of the Dansgaard/Oeschger (D/O) events onto a common age scale. However, atmospheric gases are recorded in ice cores with a log-normal-shaped age distribution probability density function, whose exact shape depends mainly on the accumulation rate on the drilling site. This age distribution effectively shifts the mid-transition points of rapid changes in CH4 measured in situ in ice by about 58% of the width of the age distribution with respect to the atmospheric signal. A minimum dating uncertainty, or artefact, in the CH4 synchronisation is therefore embedded in the concept itself, which was not accounted for in previous error estimates. This synchronisation artefact between Greenland and Antarctic ice cores is for GRIP and Byrd less than 40 years, well within the dating uncertainty of CH4, and therefore does not calls the overall concept of the bipolar seesaw into question. However, if the EPICA Dome C ice core is aligned via CH4 to NGRIP this synchronisation artefact is in the most recent unified ice core age scale (Lemieux-Dudon et al., 2010) for LGM climate conditions of the order of three centuries and might need consideration in future gas chronologies.

2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 1473-1501 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Köhler ◽  
G. Knorr ◽  
D. Buiron ◽  
A. Lourantou ◽  
J. Chappellaz

Abstract. During the last glacial/interglacial transition the Earth's climate underwent rapid changes around 14.6 kyr ago. Temperature proxies from ice cores revealed the onset of the Bølling/Allerød (B/A) warm period in the north and the start of the Antarctic Cold Reversal in the south. Furthermore, the B/A is accompanied by a rapid sea level rise of about 20 m during meltwater pulse (MWP) 1A, whose exact timing is matter of current debate. In situ measured CO2 in the EPICA Dome C (EDC) ice core also revealed a remarkable jump of 10±1 ppmv in 230 yr at the same time. Allowing for the age distribution of CO2 in firn we here show, that atmospheric CO2 rose by 20–35 ppmv in less than 200 yr, which is a factor of 2–3.5 larger than the CO2 signal recorded in situ in EDC. Based on the estimated airborne fraction of 0.17 of CO2 we infer that 125 Pg of carbon need to be released to the atmosphere to produce such a peak. Most of the carbon might have been activated as consequence of continental shelf flooding during MWP-1A. This impact of rapid sea level rise on atmospheric CO2 distinguishes the B/A from other Dansgaard/Oeschger events of the last 60 kyr, potentially defining the point of no return during the last deglaciation.


1988 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 10-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.B. Clausen ◽  
N.S. Gundestrup ◽  
S.J. Johnsen ◽  
R. Bindschadler ◽  
J. Zwally

The results of the 1984-85 post-GISP campaigns in central Greenland are presented. Eight ice cores were obtained, some spanning up to 360 years. We present: I. Geographical positions and elevations at the drill sites, II. Density and temperature in the bore holes, III. Filtered δ18O profiles and accumulation-rate variations along the ice cores. The δ18O and accumulation profiles, along with those from the 400 m Crête ice core obtained in 1974, are compared. The accumulation-rate series over a large region have a very high coherence. This indicates that a single bore hole in this region would give a representative accumulation time series over a long period. Further, it appears that for this region there is a linear relation between the measured annual accumulation rate and the mean annual δ18O values. Thus the area between Crête and Summit, just west of the ice divide, seems to be favorable for a deep-drilling operation.


1988 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 10-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.B. Clausen ◽  
N.S. Gundestrup ◽  
S.J. Johnsen ◽  
R. Bindschadler ◽  
J. Zwally

The results of the 1984-85 post-GISP campaigns in central Greenland are presented. Eight ice cores were obtained, some spanning up to 360 years. We present: I.Geographical positions and elevations at the drill sites,II.Density and temperature in the bore holes,III.Filtered δ18O profiles and accumulation-rate variations along the ice cores.The δ18O and accumulation profiles, along with those from the 400 m Crête ice core obtained in 1974, are compared.The accumulation-rate series over a large region have a very high coherence. This indicates that a single bore hole in this region would give a representative accumulation time series over a long period. Further, it appears that for this region there is a linear relation between the measured annual accumulation rate and the mean annual δ18O values. Thus the area between Crête and Summit, just west of the ice divide, seems to be favorable for a deep-drilling operation.


Microbiome ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhi-Ping Zhong ◽  
Funing Tian ◽  
Simon Roux ◽  
M. Consuelo Gazitúa ◽  
Natalie E. Solonenko ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Glacier ice archives information, including microbiology, that helps reveal paleoclimate histories and predict future climate change. Though glacier-ice microbes are studied using culture or amplicon approaches, more challenging metagenomic approaches, which provide access to functional, genome-resolved information and viruses, are under-utilized, partly due to low biomass and potential contamination. Results We expand existing clean sampling procedures using controlled artificial ice-core experiments and adapted previously established low-biomass metagenomic approaches to study glacier-ice viruses. Controlled sampling experiments drastically reduced mock contaminants including bacteria, viruses, and free DNA to background levels. Amplicon sequencing from eight depths of two Tibetan Plateau ice cores revealed common glacier-ice lineages including Janthinobacterium, Polaromonas, Herminiimonas, Flavobacterium, Sphingomonas, and Methylobacterium as the dominant genera, while microbial communities were significantly different between two ice cores, associating with different climate conditions during deposition. Separately, ~355- and ~14,400-year-old ice were subject to viral enrichment and low-input quantitative sequencing, yielding genomic sequences for 33 vOTUs. These were virtually all unique to this study, representing 28 novel genera and not a single species shared with 225 environmentally diverse viromes. Further, 42.4% of the vOTUs were identifiable temperate, which is significantly higher than that in gut, soil, and marine viromes, and indicates that temperate phages are possibly favored in glacier-ice environments before being frozen. In silico host predictions linked 18 vOTUs to co-occurring abundant bacteria (Methylobacterium, Sphingomonas, and Janthinobacterium), indicating that these phages infected ice-abundant bacterial groups before being archived. Functional genome annotation revealed four virus-encoded auxiliary metabolic genes, particularly two motility genes suggest viruses potentially facilitate nutrient acquisition for their hosts. Finally, given their possible importance to methane cycling in ice, we focused on Methylobacterium viruses by contextualizing our ice-observed viruses against 123 viromes and prophages extracted from 131 Methylobacterium genomes, revealing that the archived viruses might originate from soil or plants. Conclusions Together, these efforts further microbial and viral sampling procedures for glacier ice and provide a first window into viral communities and functions in ancient glacier environments. Such methods and datasets can potentially enable researchers to contextualize new discoveries and begin to incorporate glacier-ice microbes and their viruses relative to past and present climate change in geographically diverse regions globally.


1995 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. 201-205
Author(s):  
V. N. Mikhalenko

The spatial extrapolation of data from ice cores depends on the complexity of the glacier system where the drilling site is located. The correlation between net mass balance, bn, of a specific point and of the whole glacier is different for each point. Analysis of net mass balance of Tuyuksu glacier in the Tien Shan, central Asia, confirms that the distribution of mass balance with height is more-or-less constant from year to year except in years with extreme values bn. Two types of “similarity” are described, additive and multiplicative. The “similarity” changes gradually from additive at the peripheral parts of the Tien Shan to multiplicative in the most continental central and eastern parts. Glacier mass-balance fluctuations of the frontal ridges are connected to the oscillations of accumulation and consequently to precipitation. Where the climate is more continental the mass-balance variability depends much more on the melting conditions than on accumulation. For the spatial interpretation of ice-core drilling results, a special analysis of “similarity type” is necessary. It allows the fixing of the spatial borders of the glacier system for which the dhilling site is representative.


2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 983-999 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Capron ◽  
A. Landais ◽  
D. Buiron ◽  
A. Cauquoin ◽  
J. Chappellaz ◽  
...  

Abstract. Correct estimation of the firn lock-in depth is essential for correctly linking gas and ice chronologies in ice core studies. Here, two approaches to constrain the firn depth evolution in Antarctica are presented over the last deglaciation: outputs of a firn densification model, and measurements of δ15N of N2 in air trapped in ice core, assuming that δ15N is only affected by gravitational fractionation in the firn column. Since the firn densification process is largely governed by surface temperature and accumulation rate, we have investigated four ice cores drilled in coastal (Berkner Island, BI, and James Ross Island, JRI) and semi-coastal (TALDICE and EPICA Dronning Maud Land, EDML) Antarctic regions. Combined with available ice core air-δ15N measurements from the EPICA Dome C (EDC) site, the studied regions encompass a large range of surface accumulation rates and temperature conditions. Our δ15N profiles reveal a heterogeneous response of the firn structure to glacial–interglacial climatic changes. While firn densification simulations correctly predict TALDICE δ15N variations, they systematically fail to capture the large millennial-scale δ15N variations measured at BI and the δ15N glacial levels measured at JRI and EDML – a mismatch previously reported for central East Antarctic ice cores. New constraints of the EDML gas–ice depth offset during the Laschamp event (~41 ka) and the last deglaciation do not favour the hypothesis of a large convective zone within the firn as the explanation of the glacial firn model–δ15N data mismatch for this site. While we could not conduct an in-depth study of the influence of impurities in snow for firnification from the existing datasets, our detailed comparison between the δ15N profiles and firn model simulations under different temperature and accumulation rate scenarios suggests that the role of accumulation rate may have been underestimated in the current description of firnification models.


1999 ◽  
Vol 29 ◽  
pp. 136-140
Author(s):  
Wang Ninglian ◽  
Yao Tandong ◽  
Qin Dahe ◽  
L. G. Thompson ◽  
E. Mosley-Thompson ◽  
...  

AbstractA 36C1 peak has been found at about 37 ka BP in the Guliya ice core, drilled from the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau. This peak is indicative of enhanced cosmogenic isotope production in the atmosphere, rather than a change in accumulation rate. Comparison with the records of 10Be and 36C1 in ice cores from Antarctica and Greenland indicates that peaks of the cosmogenic isotopes are global, and that they can be used as time markers for dating ice cores. Interestingly, the 37 ka BP global event coincided with a cold period.


2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 2967-3013 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. O. Rasmussen ◽  
P. Abbott ◽  
T. Blunier ◽  
A. Bourne ◽  
E. Brook ◽  
...  

Abstract. A stratigraphy-based chronology for the North Greenland Eemian Ice Drilling (NEEM) ice core has been derived by transferring the annual layer counted Greenland Ice Core Chronology 2005 (GICC05) from the NGRIP core to the NEEM core using 787 match points of mainly volcanic origin identified in the Electrical Conductivity Measurement (ECM) and Dielectrical Profiling (DEP) records. Tephra horizons found in both the NEEM and NGRIP ice cores are used to test the matching based on ECM and DEP and provide additional horizons used for the time scale transfer. A thinning function reflecting the accumulated strain along the core has been determined using a Dansgaard–Johnsen flow model and an isotope-dependent accumulation rate parameterization. Flow parameters are determined from Monte Carlo analysis constrained by the observed depth-age horizons. In order to construct a chronology for the gas phase, the ice age–gas age difference (Δage) has been reconstructed using a coupled firn densification–heat diffusion model. Temperature and accumulation inputs to the Δage model, initially derived from the water isotope proxies, have been adjusted to optimize the fit to timing constraints from δ15N of nitrogen and high-resolution methane data during the abrupt onsets of interstadials. The ice and gas chronologies and the corresponding thinning function represent the first chronology for the NEEM core, and based on both the flow and firn modelling results, the accumulation history for the NEEM site has been reconstructed, providing the necessary basis for further analysis of the records from NEEM.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhi-Ping Zhong ◽  
Natalie E. Solonenko ◽  
Yueh-Fen Li ◽  
Maria C. Gazitúa ◽  
Simon Roux ◽  
...  

AbstractWhile glacier ice cores provide climate information over tens to hundreds of thousands of years, study of microbes is challenged by ultra-low-biomass conditions, and virtually nothing is known about co-occurring viruses. Here we establish ultra-clean microbial and viral sampling procedures and apply them to two ice cores from the Guliya ice cap (northwestern Tibetan Plateau, China) to study these archived communities. This method reduced intentionally contaminating bacterial, viral, and free DNA to background levels in artificial-ice-core control experiments, and was then applied to two authentic ice cores to profile their microbes and viruses. The microbes differed significantly across the two ice cores, presumably representing the very different climate conditions at the time of deposition that is similar to findings in other cores. Separately, viral particle enrichment and ultra-low-input quantitative viral metagenomic sequencing from ∼520 and ∼15,000 years old ice revealed 33 viral populations (i.e., species-level designations) that represented four known genera and likely 28 novel viral genera (assessed by gene-sharing networks). In silico host predictions linked 18 of the 33 viral populations to co-occurring abundant bacteria, including Methylobacterium, Sphingomonas, and Janthinobacterium, indicating that viruses infected several abundant microbial groups. Depth-specific viral communities were observed, presumably reflecting differences in the environmental conditions among the ice samples at the time of deposition. Together, these experiments establish a clean procedure for studying microbial and viral communities in low-biomass glacier ice and provide baseline information for glacier viruses, some of which appear to be associated with the dominant microbes in these ecosystems.ImportanceThis study establishes ultra-clean microbial and viral sampling procedures for glacier ice, which complements prior in silico decontamination methods and expands, for the first time, the clean procedures to viruses. Application of these methods to glacier ice confirmed prior common microbiological findings for a new ice core climate record, and provides a first window into viral genomes and their ecology from glacier ice across two time horizons, and emphasizes their likely impact on abundant microbial groups. Together these efforts provide clean sampling approaches and foundational datasets that should enable simultaneous access to an archived virosphere in glacier ice.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. H. Rhodes ◽  
X. Faïn ◽  
E. J. Brook ◽  
J. R. McConnell ◽  
O. J. Maselli ◽  
...  

Abstract. Superimposed on the coherent and major atmospheric changes in trace gases revealed by ice core records, local high frequency, non-atmospheric features can now be resolved due to improvement s in resolution and precision of analytical techniques. These are signals that could not have survived the low-pass filter effect that firn diffusion exerts on the atmospheric history and therefore do not result from changes in the composition of the atmosphere at the surface of the ice sheet. Using continuous methane (CH4) records obtained from five polar ice cores, we characterize these non-atmospheric signals and explore their origin. Isolated samples, enriched in CH4 in the Tunu13 (Greenland) record are linked to the presence of melt layers. Melting can enrich the methane concentration due to preferential dissolution of methane relative to nitrogen, but we find that an additional in-situ process is required to generate the full magnitude of these anomalies. Furthermore, in the all ice cores studied there is evidence of reproducible, decimetre-scale CH4 variability. Through a series of tests, we demonstrate that this sign al is an artifact of layered bubble trapping in a heterogeneous-density firn column; we term this phenomenon ‘trapping noise’. The magnitude of CH4 trapping noise increases with atmospheric CH4 growth rate and seasonality of density contrasts, and decreases with accumulation rate. Firn air transport model simulations, accounting for layered bubble trapping, are in agreement with our empirical data. Significant annual periodicity is present in the CH4 variability of two Greenland ice cores, suggesting that layered gas trapping at these sites is controlled by regular, seasonal variations in the physical properties of the firn.


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