Volcanic Fluxes Over the Last Millennium as Recorded in the Gv7 Ice Core (Northern Victoria Land, Antarctica)

Major explosive volcanic eruptions may significantly alter the global atmosphere for about 2–3 years. During that period, volcanic products (mainly H2SO4) with high residence time, stored in the stratosphere or, for shorter times, in the troposphere are gradually deposited onto polar ice caps. Antar...

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Published in:Geosciences
Main Authors: Raffaello Nardin, Alessandra Amore, Silvia Becagli, Laura Caiazzo, Massimo Frezzotti, Mirko Severi, Barbara Stenni, Rita Traversi
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences10010038
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author Raffaello Nardin
Alessandra Amore
Silvia Becagli
Laura Caiazzo
Massimo Frezzotti
Mirko Severi
Barbara Stenni
Rita Traversi
author_facet Raffaello Nardin
Alessandra Amore
Silvia Becagli
Laura Caiazzo
Massimo Frezzotti
Mirko Severi
Barbara Stenni
Rita Traversi
author_sort Raffaello Nardin
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
container_issue 1
container_start_page 38
container_title Geosciences
container_volume 10
description Major explosive volcanic eruptions may significantly alter the global atmosphere for about 2–3 years. During that period, volcanic products (mainly H2SO4) with high residence time, stored in the stratosphere or, for shorter times, in the troposphere are gradually deposited onto polar ice caps. Antarctic snow may thus record acidic signals providing a history of past volcanic events. The high resolution sulphate concentration profile along a 197 m long ice core drilled at GV7 (Northern Victoria land) was obtained by Ion Chromatography on around 3500 discrete samples. The relatively high accumulation rate (241 ± 13 mm we yr −1) and the 5-cm sampling resolution allowed a preliminary counted age scale. The obtained stratigraphy covers roughly the last millennium and 24 major volcanic eruptions were identified, dated, and tentatively ascribed to a source volcano. The deposition flux of volcanic sulphate was calculated for each signature and the results were compared with data from other Antarctic ice cores at regional and continental scale. Our results show that the regional variability is of the same order of magnitude as the continental one.
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2076-3263/10/1/38/ 2025-01-16T19:12:41+00:00 Volcanic Fluxes Over the Last Millennium as Recorded in the Gv7 Ice Core (Northern Victoria Land, Antarctica) Raffaello Nardin Alessandra Amore Silvia Becagli Laura Caiazzo Massimo Frezzotti Mirko Severi Barbara Stenni Rita Traversi agris 2020-01-20 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences10010038 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Geophysics https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/geosciences10010038 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Geosciences; Volume 10; Issue 1; Pages: 38 volcanism Antarctica ion chromatography paleoclimate ice cores tephra Text 2020 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences10010038 2023-07-31T23:01:26Z Major explosive volcanic eruptions may significantly alter the global atmosphere for about 2–3 years. During that period, volcanic products (mainly H2SO4) with high residence time, stored in the stratosphere or, for shorter times, in the troposphere are gradually deposited onto polar ice caps. Antarctic snow may thus record acidic signals providing a history of past volcanic events. The high resolution sulphate concentration profile along a 197 m long ice core drilled at GV7 (Northern Victoria land) was obtained by Ion Chromatography on around 3500 discrete samples. The relatively high accumulation rate (241 ± 13 mm we yr −1) and the 5-cm sampling resolution allowed a preliminary counted age scale. The obtained stratigraphy covers roughly the last millennium and 24 major volcanic eruptions were identified, dated, and tentatively ascribed to a source volcano. The deposition flux of volcanic sulphate was calculated for each signature and the results were compared with data from other Antarctic ice cores at regional and continental scale. Our results show that the regional variability is of the same order of magnitude as the continental one. Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica ice core Victoria Land MDPI Open Access Publishing Antarctic Victoria Land Geosciences 10 1 38
spellingShingle volcanism
Antarctica
ion chromatography
paleoclimate
ice cores
tephra
Raffaello Nardin
Alessandra Amore
Silvia Becagli
Laura Caiazzo
Massimo Frezzotti
Mirko Severi
Barbara Stenni
Rita Traversi
Volcanic Fluxes Over the Last Millennium as Recorded in the Gv7 Ice Core (Northern Victoria Land, Antarctica)
title Volcanic Fluxes Over the Last Millennium as Recorded in the Gv7 Ice Core (Northern Victoria Land, Antarctica)
title_full Volcanic Fluxes Over the Last Millennium as Recorded in the Gv7 Ice Core (Northern Victoria Land, Antarctica)
title_fullStr Volcanic Fluxes Over the Last Millennium as Recorded in the Gv7 Ice Core (Northern Victoria Land, Antarctica)
title_full_unstemmed Volcanic Fluxes Over the Last Millennium as Recorded in the Gv7 Ice Core (Northern Victoria Land, Antarctica)
title_short Volcanic Fluxes Over the Last Millennium as Recorded in the Gv7 Ice Core (Northern Victoria Land, Antarctica)
title_sort volcanic fluxes over the last millennium as recorded in the gv7 ice core (northern victoria land, antarctica)
topic volcanism
Antarctica
ion chromatography
paleoclimate
ice cores
tephra
topic_facet volcanism
Antarctica
ion chromatography
paleoclimate
ice cores
tephra
url https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences10010038