Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2021

Presentation information

[J] Oral

A (Atmospheric and Hydrospheric Sciences ) » A-CC Cryospheric Sciences & Cold District Environment

[A-CC26] Ice cores and paleoenvironmental modeling

Thu. Jun 3, 2021 1:45 PM - 3:15 PM Ch.13 (Zoom Room 13)

convener:Nozomu Takeuchi(Chiba University), Ayako Abe-Ouchi(Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute, The University of Tokyo), Ryu Uemura(Nagoya University), Kenji Kawamura(National Institute of Polar Research, Research Organization of Information and Systems), Chairperson:Ayako Abe-Ouchi(Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute, The University of Tokyo), Kenji Kawamura(National Institute of Polar Research, Research Organization of Information and Systems)

1:45 PM - 2:00 PM

[ACC26-01] Fractionation of O2/N2 and Ar/N2 in polar ice cores during bubble formation, bubble-clathrate hydrate transition, and gas loss during storage from precise gas measurements of the Dome Fuji ice core, Antarctica

★Invited Papers

*Ikumi Oyabu1, Kenji Kawamura1,2,3, Tsutomu Uchida4, Shuji Fujita1,2, Kyotaro Kitamura1, Motohiro Hirabayashi1, Jeffrey Severinghaus5, Morgan Jacob5 (1.National Institute of Polar Research, Research Organization of Information and Systems, 2.The Graduate University of Advanced Studies (SOKENDAI), 3.Japan Agency for Marine Science and Technology (JAMSTEC), 4.Hokkaido University, 5.Scripps Institution of Oceanography)

Keywords:ice core, ice sheet, Dome Fuji, fractionation, O2/N2, Ar/N2

The variations of δΟ22 and δΑr/N2 in the Dome Fuji ice core were measured from 112 m (bubbly ice) to 2000 m (clathrate hydrate ice) at high precision. Our method combined with low storage temperature (-50 °C) successfully remove post-coring gas-loss fractionation signals from our data. From bubbly ice to the middle of bubble-clathrate transition zone (BCTZ) (112 – 800 m) and below the BCTZ (>1200 m), the δΟ22 and δΑr/N2 data exhibit orbital-scale variations similar to local summer insolation. The data in the lower BCTZ (800 – 1200 m) have large scatters, which may be caused by mm-scale inhomogeneity of air composition combined with finite sample lengths. In the clathrate hydrate zone, the scatters around the orbital-scale variability decrease with depth, indicating diffusive smoothing of δΟ22 and δΑr/N2. A simple gas diffusion model was used to reproduce the smoothing and thus constrain permeation coefficients of the gases. Relationship between δAr/Ν2 and δΟ22 is markedly different for the datasets representing bubble close-off (slope ~0.5), diffusion within the ice sheet (~1), and post-coring gas-loss (~0.2), suggesting that the dominant fractionation processes are different for those cases. The method and data presented here may be useful for improving the orbital dating of deep ice cores over the multiple glacial cycles, and for further studying non-insolation-driven signals (e.g., atmospheric composition) of these gases.