Exploration and Development of the Climate Archive of the Allan Hills Blue Ice Area, Antarctica

The ice flow, stable water isotopic composition, and glaciochemistry of ice within the Allan Hills Blue Ice Area (AH BIA), Antarctica, is investigated to determine its potential for contributing to and extending the currently available 800 ka ice core record of paleoclimate. The investigation began...

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Main Author: Spaulding, Nicole E
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@UMaine 2013
Subjects:
Bia
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd/2314
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/context/etd/article/2987/viewcontent/SpauldingNE2013_OCR.pdf
id ftmaineuniv:oai:digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu:etd-2987
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spelling ftmaineuniv:oai:digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu:etd-2987 2023-06-11T04:06:12+02:00 Exploration and Development of the Climate Archive of the Allan Hills Blue Ice Area, Antarctica Spaulding, Nicole E 2013-05-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd/2314 https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/context/etd/article/2987/viewcontent/SpauldingNE2013_OCR.pdf unknown DigitalCommons@UMaine https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd/2314 https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/context/etd/article/2987/viewcontent/SpauldingNE2013_OCR.pdf Electronic Theses and Dissertations Antarctica Climate Ice cores Paleoclimatology Earth Sciences text 2013 ftmaineuniv 2023-05-04T18:01:52Z The ice flow, stable water isotopic composition, and glaciochemistry of ice within the Allan Hills Blue Ice Area (AH BIA), Antarctica, is investigated to determine its potential for contributing to and extending the currently available 800 ka ice core record of paleoclimate. The investigation began with a study of ice dynamics within the AH BIA. The horizontal (u) and vertical (ż) ice velocities, determined using high-precision GPS measurements, are 1.5 to 50 (±0.12) cm a-1 and 2-3 (±0.50) cm a-1, respectively. The significant positive z and low u verify that old ice is present at the surface. Surface topography, in combination with u, was used to delineate a flowline (A-B) along which ice of continuous age was collected for the next stage of the investigation. Surface ice was recovered along 5 km of A-B and a 225 meter core was drilled at its midpoint. Ice samples were analyzed for stable isotopes of water (δD, δ18O), which are common proxies for temperature. The resulting profiles exhibit variability consistent with the magnitude of glacial-interglacial transitions in East Antarctica. These variations, in combination with 40Aratm and δ18Oatm constrain the age of sampled ice to 90-250 ka. However, the 100 meters of directly above bedrock was not collected and the bottom depth is calculated to be at least 400 ka. The final phase of the investigation involved determining the concentrations of terrestrial and marine chemical species in ice from multiple points along A-B. Concentrations ranged from pg L-1 level for rare earth elements to μg L-1 level for multi-sourced compounds like sulfate. The concentrations of all analytes were anticorrelated with stable water isotope values indicating they had preserved a record of changes in atmospheric circulation, source strength, and continental aridity. The composition of rare earth elements points to Australia as an important interglacial dust source, while molar ratios of major ions, particularly Ca2+:Cl- and Mg2+:Cl-, suggest that transport pathways through the McMurdo ... Text Antarc* Antarctica East Antarctica ice core The University of Maine: DigitalCommons@UMaine Allan Hills ENVELOPE(159.667,159.667,-76.717,-76.717) Bia ENVELOPE(22.891,22.891,70.317,70.317) East Antarctica
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Maine: DigitalCommons@UMaine
op_collection_id ftmaineuniv
language unknown
topic Antarctica
Climate
Ice cores
Paleoclimatology
Earth Sciences
spellingShingle Antarctica
Climate
Ice cores
Paleoclimatology
Earth Sciences
Spaulding, Nicole E
Exploration and Development of the Climate Archive of the Allan Hills Blue Ice Area, Antarctica
topic_facet Antarctica
Climate
Ice cores
Paleoclimatology
Earth Sciences
description The ice flow, stable water isotopic composition, and glaciochemistry of ice within the Allan Hills Blue Ice Area (AH BIA), Antarctica, is investigated to determine its potential for contributing to and extending the currently available 800 ka ice core record of paleoclimate. The investigation began with a study of ice dynamics within the AH BIA. The horizontal (u) and vertical (ż) ice velocities, determined using high-precision GPS measurements, are 1.5 to 50 (±0.12) cm a-1 and 2-3 (±0.50) cm a-1, respectively. The significant positive z and low u verify that old ice is present at the surface. Surface topography, in combination with u, was used to delineate a flowline (A-B) along which ice of continuous age was collected for the next stage of the investigation. Surface ice was recovered along 5 km of A-B and a 225 meter core was drilled at its midpoint. Ice samples were analyzed for stable isotopes of water (δD, δ18O), which are common proxies for temperature. The resulting profiles exhibit variability consistent with the magnitude of glacial-interglacial transitions in East Antarctica. These variations, in combination with 40Aratm and δ18Oatm constrain the age of sampled ice to 90-250 ka. However, the 100 meters of directly above bedrock was not collected and the bottom depth is calculated to be at least 400 ka. The final phase of the investigation involved determining the concentrations of terrestrial and marine chemical species in ice from multiple points along A-B. Concentrations ranged from pg L-1 level for rare earth elements to μg L-1 level for multi-sourced compounds like sulfate. The concentrations of all analytes were anticorrelated with stable water isotope values indicating they had preserved a record of changes in atmospheric circulation, source strength, and continental aridity. The composition of rare earth elements points to Australia as an important interglacial dust source, while molar ratios of major ions, particularly Ca2+:Cl- and Mg2+:Cl-, suggest that transport pathways through the McMurdo ...
format Text
author Spaulding, Nicole E
author_facet Spaulding, Nicole E
author_sort Spaulding, Nicole E
title Exploration and Development of the Climate Archive of the Allan Hills Blue Ice Area, Antarctica
title_short Exploration and Development of the Climate Archive of the Allan Hills Blue Ice Area, Antarctica
title_full Exploration and Development of the Climate Archive of the Allan Hills Blue Ice Area, Antarctica
title_fullStr Exploration and Development of the Climate Archive of the Allan Hills Blue Ice Area, Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Exploration and Development of the Climate Archive of the Allan Hills Blue Ice Area, Antarctica
title_sort exploration and development of the climate archive of the allan hills blue ice area, antarctica
publisher DigitalCommons@UMaine
publishDate 2013
url https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd/2314
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/context/etd/article/2987/viewcontent/SpauldingNE2013_OCR.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(159.667,159.667,-76.717,-76.717)
ENVELOPE(22.891,22.891,70.317,70.317)
geographic Allan Hills
Bia
East Antarctica
geographic_facet Allan Hills
Bia
East Antarctica
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
East Antarctica
ice core
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
East Antarctica
ice core
op_source Electronic Theses and Dissertations
op_relation https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd/2314
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/context/etd/article/2987/viewcontent/SpauldingNE2013_OCR.pdf
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