In the framework of the PNRA-ITASE (Programma Nazionale di Ricerche in Antartide-International Trans-Antarctic Scientific Expedition) project, during the field season 1998/99, surface snow (1 m cores and pits) and shallow firn cores (10-50 m) were collected along a traverse from Terra Nova Bay (northern Victoria Land) to Dome C (East Antarctic ice sheet). Results of chemical, tritium and stable-isotope composition are presented here for the 1 m cores, some snow pits and the first 2 m of some shallow firn cores. The delta(18)O values show a regular trend with altitude, and the regression line between delta(18)O and surface temperature is delta(18)O = 0.99T (degreesC) - 0.67. Primary aerosol components such as Na+, Cl-, Ca2+, Mg2+ and K+ show high concentrations decreasing with increasing altitude in the first 250-350 km from the coast. At greater distances, concentrations of these species remain more constant. NO3- concentration shows an irregular profile with a progressive decreasing trend as altitude increases. Non-sea-salt (nss) SO42- concentration decreases up to about 250 km from the coast, increases 250-770 km from the coast and remains relatively constant in the most remote stations. Methanesulphonate (MSA) concentration shows high variability. The MSA/nssSO(4)(2-) ratio exhibits a decreasing trend 250-550 km from the coast. With increasing distance, the ratio shows moderate oscillations. nssCl(-) concentration shows a progressive increase as distance from the coast increases, in agreement with the increasing influence of HCl on the Cl- budget of the inland Antarctic atmosphere. Post-depositional re-emissions of Cl- and NO3- were found at stations characterized at the surface by long-term accumulation hiatus (wind crusts). The chemical-species distribution is consistent with the presence in the studied area of local and long-range transport processes, post-depositional effects and snow-accumulation variations observed along the traverse.

Chemical and isotopic variability along the ITASE traverse from Terra Nova Bay to Dome C, East Antarctica / M. Proposito; S. Becagli; E. Castellano; O. Flora; L. Genoni; R. Gragnani; B. Stenni; R. Traversi; R. Udisti; M. Frezzotti.. - In: ANNALS OF GLACIOLOGY. - ISSN 0260-3055. - STAMPA. - 35:(2002), pp. 291-298. [10.3189/172756402781817167]

Chemical and isotopic variability along the ITASE traverse from Terra Nova Bay to Dome C, East Antarctica

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

Abstract

In the framework of the PNRA-ITASE (Programma Nazionale di Ricerche in Antartide-International Trans-Antarctic Scientific Expedition) project, during the field season 1998/99, surface snow (1 m cores and pits) and shallow firn cores (10-50 m) were collected along a traverse from Terra Nova Bay (northern Victoria Land) to Dome C (East Antarctic ice sheet). Results of chemical, tritium and stable-isotope composition are presented here for the 1 m cores, some snow pits and the first 2 m of some shallow firn cores. The delta(18)O values show a regular trend with altitude, and the regression line between delta(18)O and surface temperature is delta(18)O = 0.99T (degreesC) - 0.67. Primary aerosol components such as Na+, Cl-, Ca2+, Mg2+ and K+ show high concentrations decreasing with increasing altitude in the first 250-350 km from the coast. At greater distances, concentrations of these species remain more constant. NO3- concentration shows an irregular profile with a progressive decreasing trend as altitude increases. Non-sea-salt (nss) SO42- concentration decreases up to about 250 km from the coast, increases 250-770 km from the coast and remains relatively constant in the most remote stations. Methanesulphonate (MSA) concentration shows high variability. The MSA/nssSO(4)(2-) ratio exhibits a decreasing trend 250-550 km from the coast. With increasing distance, the ratio shows moderate oscillations. nssCl(-) concentration shows a progressive increase as distance from the coast increases, in agreement with the increasing influence of HCl on the Cl- budget of the inland Antarctic atmosphere. Post-depositional re-emissions of Cl- and NO3- were found at stations characterized at the surface by long-term accumulation hiatus (wind crusts). The chemical-species distribution is consistent with the presence in the studied area of local and long-range transport processes, post-depositional effects and snow-accumulation variations observed along the traverse.
2002
35
291
298
M. Proposito; S. Becagli; E. Castellano; O. Flora; L. Genoni; R. Gragnani; B. Stenni; R. Traversi; R. Udisti; M. Frezzotti.
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/777116
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