4:00 PM - 4:15 PM
[ACC26-08] Seasonally Resolved Age Scale for Greenland SE-Dome II Ice Core Based on Oxygen Isotope Record
Keywords:Ice core, oxygen stable isotope
We analyzed the oxygen isotope ratio of water (δ18O) with a cavity ring-down spectrometer (L2130-i, Picarro) at 5 cm resolution. Two methods were used to create the age scale: (i) pattern matching of δ18O with precipitation isotope models based on meteorological reanalysis data (1881-2019) and (ii) an automated annual layer counting algorithm (pre-1881). For 1881-1978, we used a precipitation isotope model based on 20th-century reanalysis data.
As in previous studies (Furukawa et al., 2017), the correlation between the ice core data and the model in (i) was high (r = 0.73), and the pattern matching of δ18O was able to estimate the age with an accuracy of a few months. High correlations were also obtained for the interval of 20th-century reanalysis data. For the automated annual layer counting (1799-1881), the error was ±1 year. The age scale was also consistent with the reference layers of volcanic eruptions, melting, and Tritium peak.
To confirm the usefulness of the age scale, we applied the age scale to available H2O2 concentration data from the SE2 ice core. The results showed that the seasonality of H2O2 concentration can be reconstructed within a few months of age uncertainty. These results suggest that the obtained age scale can be used to reconstruct various atmospheric environmental data over the past 140 years at the level of seasonal variations.
References :
Furukawa et al. (2017) Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, https://doi.org/10.1002/2017JD026716