Black carbon concentrations and fluxes during recent millennia from a developing array of Arctic ice cores

Short-lived aerosols such as black carbon (BC) and dust are important components of climate forcing, although warming from increased carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas concentrations is the long-term driver of climate change. With their short lifetimes in the atmosphere, aerosol concentrations...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: McConnell, J.R., Dahl-Jensen, D., Fritzsche, Diedrich, Nolan, M., Sigl, M.
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/44836/
https://goldschmidtabstracts.info/abstracts/abstractView?id=2013001798
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.51084
id ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:44836
record_format openpolar
spelling ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:44836 2024-09-15T17:35:52+00:00 Black carbon concentrations and fluxes during recent millennia from a developing array of Arctic ice cores McConnell, J.R. Dahl-Jensen, D. Fritzsche, Diedrich Nolan, M. Sigl, M. 2013 https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/44836/ https://goldschmidtabstracts.info/abstracts/abstractView?id=2013001798 https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.51084 unknown McConnell, J. , Dahl-Jensen, D. , Fritzsche, D. orcid:0000-0002-0018-8993 , Nolan, M. and Sigl, M. (2013) Black carbon concentrations and fluxes during recent millennia from a developing array of Arctic ice cores , Goldschmidt Conference 2013, Florence, Italy, 25 August 2013 - 30 August 2013 . hdl:10013/epic.51084 EPIC3Goldschmidt Conference 2013, Florence, Italy, 2013-08-25-2013-08-30 Conference notRev 2013 ftawi 2024-06-24T04:17:43Z Short-lived aerosols such as black carbon (BC) and dust are important components of climate forcing, although warming from increased carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas concentrations is the long-term driver of climate change. With their short lifetimes in the atmosphere, aerosol concentrations and deposition rates are dominated by regional – rather than global – sources and intra- and inter-annual variability is high. Such aerosols in snow are especially important in the high latitudes because of their strong impact on albedo. Because most BC aerosols in high latitudes originate in lower latitudes, changes in long range transport processes and pathways may dominate over changes in source strength in determining concentrations and deposition rates in these regions. However, detailed understanding of past and present concentrations, deposition rates, sources, and transport pathways of BC to and within the Arctic is lacking. Here we present and discuss detailed records of BC measured in a developing array of ice cores widely distributed around the Arctic. We use a range of elemental and chemical tracers measured in the same ice cores to identify likely sources and to investigate spatial and temporal patterns of BC deposition during recent centuries and millennia. Conference Object albedo Arctic black carbon Climate change Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
institution Open Polar
collection Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
op_collection_id ftawi
language unknown
description Short-lived aerosols such as black carbon (BC) and dust are important components of climate forcing, although warming from increased carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas concentrations is the long-term driver of climate change. With their short lifetimes in the atmosphere, aerosol concentrations and deposition rates are dominated by regional – rather than global – sources and intra- and inter-annual variability is high. Such aerosols in snow are especially important in the high latitudes because of their strong impact on albedo. Because most BC aerosols in high latitudes originate in lower latitudes, changes in long range transport processes and pathways may dominate over changes in source strength in determining concentrations and deposition rates in these regions. However, detailed understanding of past and present concentrations, deposition rates, sources, and transport pathways of BC to and within the Arctic is lacking. Here we present and discuss detailed records of BC measured in a developing array of ice cores widely distributed around the Arctic. We use a range of elemental and chemical tracers measured in the same ice cores to identify likely sources and to investigate spatial and temporal patterns of BC deposition during recent centuries and millennia.
format Conference Object
author McConnell, J.R.
Dahl-Jensen, D.
Fritzsche, Diedrich
Nolan, M.
Sigl, M.
spellingShingle McConnell, J.R.
Dahl-Jensen, D.
Fritzsche, Diedrich
Nolan, M.
Sigl, M.
Black carbon concentrations and fluxes during recent millennia from a developing array of Arctic ice cores
author_facet McConnell, J.R.
Dahl-Jensen, D.
Fritzsche, Diedrich
Nolan, M.
Sigl, M.
author_sort McConnell, J.R.
title Black carbon concentrations and fluxes during recent millennia from a developing array of Arctic ice cores
title_short Black carbon concentrations and fluxes during recent millennia from a developing array of Arctic ice cores
title_full Black carbon concentrations and fluxes during recent millennia from a developing array of Arctic ice cores
title_fullStr Black carbon concentrations and fluxes during recent millennia from a developing array of Arctic ice cores
title_full_unstemmed Black carbon concentrations and fluxes during recent millennia from a developing array of Arctic ice cores
title_sort black carbon concentrations and fluxes during recent millennia from a developing array of arctic ice cores
publishDate 2013
url https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/44836/
https://goldschmidtabstracts.info/abstracts/abstractView?id=2013001798
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.51084
genre albedo
Arctic
black carbon
Climate change
genre_facet albedo
Arctic
black carbon
Climate change
op_source EPIC3Goldschmidt Conference 2013, Florence, Italy, 2013-08-25-2013-08-30
op_relation McConnell, J. , Dahl-Jensen, D. , Fritzsche, D. orcid:0000-0002-0018-8993 , Nolan, M. and Sigl, M. (2013) Black carbon concentrations and fluxes during recent millennia from a developing array of Arctic ice cores , Goldschmidt Conference 2013, Florence, Italy, 25 August 2013 - 30 August 2013 . hdl:10013/epic.51084
_version_ 1810483210359930880