Evaluation of aeolian dust records obtained from Polar Ice Cores

When an ice core sample is analysed for its aeolian dust content, it is melted and the particles detected are suspended in water. Consequently, dust measurement techniques employed in the ice core community differ from those used for in-situ studies of airborne dust. Methods commonly used to classif...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kettner, Ernesto, Grindsted, Aslak, Wegner, Anna, Petit, Jean Robert, Erhardt, Tobias, Schüpbach, Simon, Vallelonga, Paul, Svensson, Anders
Other Authors: Fiore, Saverio
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: Digilabs S.a.s. 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/37261/
https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/37261/2/EPIC_upload.pdf
http://www.scientevents.com/proscience/?wpdmdl=148
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.44955
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.44955.d002
Description
Summary:When an ice core sample is analysed for its aeolian dust content, it is melted and the particles detected are suspended in water. Consequently, dust measurement techniques employed in the ice core community differ from those used for in-situ studies of airborne dust. Methods commonly used to classify insolubles suspended in a liquid are either based on the particles’ interaction with light or on the detection of resistive pulses by means of Coulter counting. Data sets obtained with Coulter counters are widely accepted as references and other techniques are judged against their ability to reproduce these. Unfortunately, optically acquired ice core dust records were found to differ. By analyzing two sections of the NEEM dust record, two different evaluation procedures are discussed before a third protocol is proposed. It is found that relative changes in the archived dust load can be reproduced, while the simultaneous attainment of absolute concentrations or changes in the grain size frequency histograms in high resolution remains difficult.