Temporal markers in a temperate ice core: insights from 3H and 137Cs profiles from the Adamello Glacier

The article discusses the use of tritium ( 3 H) and cesium ( 137 Cs) as temporal markers in ice cores extracted from temperate glaciers. We present a complete tritium profile for a 46 m ice core drilled from the Adamello Glacier, a temperate glacier in the Italian Alps, and compare it to the 137 Cs...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Cryosphere
Main Authors: Stefano, Elena, Baccolo, Giovanni, Clemenza, Massimiliano, Delmonte, Barbara, Fiorini, Deborah, Garzonio, Roberto, Schwikowski, Margit, Maggi, Valter
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-18-2865-2024
https://tc.copernicus.org/articles/18/2865/2024/
Description
Summary:The article discusses the use of tritium ( 3 H) and cesium ( 137 Cs) as temporal markers in ice cores extracted from temperate glaciers. We present a complete tritium profile for a 46 m ice core drilled from the Adamello Glacier, a temperate glacier in the Italian Alps, and compare it to the 137 Cs profile from the same ice core. Our analysis reveals tritium contamination between 19 and 32 m of depth, which can be attributed to the global radioactive fallout caused by atmospheric nuclear-bomb testing that took place in the 1950s and 1960s. Results show that the radioactive peak associated with 1963 does not occur at the same depth for both 3 H and 137 Cs; instead, the tritium peak is 1.5 m above the cesium one. Our hypothesis is that this misalignment is caused by meltwater-induced post-depositional processes that affect 137 Cs, which is more sensitive to percolation than 3 H. The total inventory of 137 Cs in this ice core is also among the lowest ever reported, providing additional evidence that the presence of meltwater has affected the distribution of this radionuclide within the ice. In contrast, the total tritium inventory is comparable to what is reported in the literature, making it a more reliable temporal marker for temperate glaciers.