Fast Ion Chromatographic (FIC) analysis of the first European Project for Ice Coring in Antarctica (EPICA) Dome C ice core (788 m deep) was used to obtain high-resolution profiles for C1-, NO3- and SO^^^, spanning the last 45 000 years. About 19 000 determinations for each component, with an average resolution of 4.0 cm, were performed in the field on continuously melted firn- and ice-core sections. The measured core covers the Holocene, the glacial/interglacial transition and about one-third of the last ice age. In the glacial period, mean concentrations of 93.8, 24.4 and 178.4 pg L-' were calculated for C1-, NOs- and So4'-, respectively. The mean levels significantly increase in the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), when these compounds reach .values of 149.6,53.9 and 219.3 pg L-'. During the glacial/interglacial transition, the mean concentrations quickly decrease reaching the typical Holocene values of 19.1,12.9 and 93.3 pg L-', for CI-, NO3- and SO^^-, respectively. Al1 species settle on Holocene-like values about 4000 years before the beginning of the warm period (from the isotopic curve) showing a low (chloride) and no (nitrate and sulphate) sensitivity to Antarctic Cold Reversal climatic change. The sulphate decrease is consistent with the dilution factor due to the higher accumulation rate in the interglacial conditions (about 2.5), suggesting no significant change in source intensity or transport efficiency occurred for this component. On the contrary, the Holocene values for chloride and nitrate, being much lower than those measured in the LGM, suggest a source-intensity and transport-efficiency enhancement during the LGM andlor a more effective fixing of HC1 and HN03 in the snow layers through the neutralizing effect of the higher atmospheric dust load.

High-resolution Fast Ion Chromatography (FIC) measurements of chloride, nitrate and sulphate along the EPICA-Dome C ice core / R. TRAVERSI; S. BECAGLI; E. CASTELLANO; A. MIGLIORI; M. SEVERI; R. UDISTI.. - In: ANNALS OF GLACIOLOGY. - ISSN 0260-3055. - STAMPA. - 35:(2002), pp. 291-298. [10.3189/172756402781816564]

High-resolution Fast Ion Chromatography (FIC) measurements of chloride, nitrate and sulphate along the EPICA-Dome C ice core.

TRAVERSI, RITA;BECAGLI, SILVIA;CASTELLANO, EMILIANO;SEVERI, MIRKO;UDISTI, ROBERTO
2002

Abstract

Fast Ion Chromatographic (FIC) analysis of the first European Project for Ice Coring in Antarctica (EPICA) Dome C ice core (788 m deep) was used to obtain high-resolution profiles for C1-, NO3- and SO^^^, spanning the last 45 000 years. About 19 000 determinations for each component, with an average resolution of 4.0 cm, were performed in the field on continuously melted firn- and ice-core sections. The measured core covers the Holocene, the glacial/interglacial transition and about one-third of the last ice age. In the glacial period, mean concentrations of 93.8, 24.4 and 178.4 pg L-' were calculated for C1-, NOs- and So4'-, respectively. The mean levels significantly increase in the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), when these compounds reach .values of 149.6,53.9 and 219.3 pg L-'. During the glacial/interglacial transition, the mean concentrations quickly decrease reaching the typical Holocene values of 19.1,12.9 and 93.3 pg L-', for CI-, NO3- and SO^^-, respectively. Al1 species settle on Holocene-like values about 4000 years before the beginning of the warm period (from the isotopic curve) showing a low (chloride) and no (nitrate and sulphate) sensitivity to Antarctic Cold Reversal climatic change. The sulphate decrease is consistent with the dilution factor due to the higher accumulation rate in the interglacial conditions (about 2.5), suggesting no significant change in source intensity or transport efficiency occurred for this component. On the contrary, the Holocene values for chloride and nitrate, being much lower than those measured in the LGM, suggest a source-intensity and transport-efficiency enhancement during the LGM andlor a more effective fixing of HC1 and HN03 in the snow layers through the neutralizing effect of the higher atmospheric dust load.
2002
35
291
298
R. TRAVERSI; S. BECAGLI; E. CASTELLANO; A. MIGLIORI; M. SEVERI; R. UDISTI.
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/224854
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