Oxygen isotopes from two snow trenches from Kohnen Station, Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica from the 2012/13 field season

In low-accumulation regions, the reliability of d18O-derived temperature signals from ice cores within the Holocene is unclear, primarily due to the small climate changes relative to the intrinsic noise of the isotopic signal. In order to learn about the representativity of single ice cores and to o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Münch, Thomas, Kipfstuhl, Sepp, Freitag, Johannes, Meyer, Hanno, Laepple, Thomas
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: PANGAEA 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.861675
https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.861675
Description
Summary:In low-accumulation regions, the reliability of d18O-derived temperature signals from ice cores within the Holocene is unclear, primarily due to the small climate changes relative to the intrinsic noise of the isotopic signal. In order to learn about the representativity of single ice cores and to optimise future ice-core-based climate reconstructions, we studied the stable-water isotope composition of firn at Kohnen station, Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica. Analysing d18O in two 50 m long snow trenches allowed us to create an unprecedented, two-dimensional image characterising the isotopic variations from the centimetre to the hundred-metre scale. This data set includes the complete trench oxygen isotope record together with the meta data used in the study.