日本地球惑星科学連合2025年大会

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[J] ポスター発表

セッション記号 A (大気水圏科学) » A-CC 雪氷学・寒冷環境

[A-CC33] アイスコアと古環境モデリング

2025年5月28日(水) 17:15 〜 19:15 ポスター会場 (幕張メッセ国際展示場 7・8ホール)

コンビーナ:竹内 望(千葉大学)、植村 立(名古屋大学 環境学研究科)、川村 賢二(情報・システム研究機構 国立極地研究所)、齋藤 冬樹(国立研究開発法人海洋研究開発機構)

17:15 〜 19:15

[ACC33-P03] Changes in black carbon concentrations and sizes at Dome Fuji, East Antarctica between 3 and 30 ka BP

*東 久美子1、福田 かおり1、尾形 純1茂木 信宏2、森 樹大3大畑 祥4近藤 豊1小池 真5、平林 幹啓1、北村 享太郎1米倉 綾香6,1,7藤田 秀二1,6中澤 文男1,6塚川 佳美1大藪 幾美1,6川村 賢二1,6 (1.国立極地研究所、2.東京都立大学、3.慶応義塾大学、4.名古屋大学、5.東京大学、6.総研大、7.マリンワークス)

キーワード:ブラックカーボン、アイスコア、ドームふじ、南極、バイオマス燃焼

Black carbon (BC) is an important light-absorbing aerosol species that influences Earth’s radiation budget. During preindustrial times, BC was primarily produced by biomass burning, such as wildfires. Emissions from large wildfires can impact air quality, ecosystems, and the climate. In turn, climate changes can alter the frequency and intensity of wildfires, influencing BC emissions. Despite numerous studies through observations and aerosol/climate models, our understanding of the impacts of BC on the radiation budget remains limited. Similarly, the effects of climate change on BC emissions are poorly understood. Ongoing global warming is expected to affect wildfire activity; however, predictions are constrained by the lack of long-term records of natural wildfires. Ice core BC data offer valuable insights into the history of natural wildfire activity.
In this study, we analyzed the second Dome Fuji deep ice core, drilled in East Antarctica, for a depth interval of 120 to 640 m. This depth interval corresponds to the period between 3-30 ka BP. Measurements were conducted using a recently developed Wide-Range Single Particle Soot Photometer (WR-SP2), which was attached to a Continuous Flow Analysis (CFA) system. This setup enabled high-resolution and accurate measurements of size distributions and concentrations of BC particles with diameters ranging from approximately 70 to 4,000 nm.
BC mass fluxes were calculated using BC mass concentrations and accumulation rate data. At Dome Fuji, BC mass fluxes were high during the LGM, decreased over Termination I, and increased again in the early Holocene. This temporal trend contrasts sharply with the BC mass fluxes at WAIS Divide, West Antarctica. Furthermore, we observed significant changes in the average mass of BC particles (mBC), an indicator of BC size distribution, during Termination I. The mBC values during the LGM were 3–4 times greater than those in the Holocene. Since BC in the Dome Fuji ice core likely originated from terrestrial regions surrounding Antarctica, such as South America, we analyzed variations in BC to assess the influence of climate change on biomass burning in these areas.