New insights into the use of stable water isotopes at the northern Antarctic Peninsula as a tool for regional climate studies

Due to recent atmospheric and oceanic warming, the Antarctic Peninsula is one of the most challenging regions of Antarctica to understand in terms of both local-and regional-scale climate signals. Steep topography and a lack of long-term and in situ meteorological observations complicate the extrapo...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Cryosphere
Main Authors: Fernandoy, Francisco, Tetzner Ivovich, Dieter Rudolf, Meyer, Hanno, Gacitua, Guisella, Hoffmann, Kirstin, Falk, Ulrike, Lambert, Fabrice, MacDonell, Shelley
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: European Geosciences Union 2018
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-12-1069-2018
https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/150044
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Summary:Due to recent atmospheric and oceanic warming, the Antarctic Peninsula is one of the most challenging regions of Antarctica to understand in terms of both local-and regional-scale climate signals. Steep topography and a lack of long-term and in situ meteorological observations complicate the extrapolation of existing climate models to the sub-regional scale. Therefore, new techniques must be developed to better understand processes operating in the region. Isotope signals are traditionally related mainly to atmospheric conditions, but a detailed analysis of individual components can give new insight into oceanic and atmospheric processes. This paper aims to use new isotopic records collected from snow and firn cores in conjunction with existing meteorological and oceanic datasets to determine changes at the climatic scale in the northern extent of the Antarctic Peninsula. In particular, a discernible effect of sea ice cover on local temperatures and the expression of climatic modes, especially the Southern Annular Mode (SAM), is demonstrated. In years with a large sea ice extension in winter (negative SAM anomaly), an inversion layer in the lower troposphere develops at the coastal zone. Therefore, an isotope-temperature relationship (delta-T) valid for all periods cannot be obtained, and instead the delta-T depends on the seasonal variability of oceanic conditions. Comparatively, transitional seasons (autumn and spring) have a consistent isotope-temperature gradient of +0.69 parts per thousand degrees C-1. As shown by firn core analysis, the near-surface temperature in the northern-most portion of the Antarctic Peninsula shows a decreasing trend (0.33 degrees C year(-1)) between 2008 and 2014. In addition, the deuterium excess (d(excess)) is demonstrated to be a reliable indicator of seasonal oceanic conditions, and therefore suitable to improve a firn age model based on seasonal d(excess) variability. The annual accumulation rate in this region is highly variable, ranging between 1060 and 2470 kgm(-2) year(-1) ...