4.4 Article

Late-Holocene climate evolution at the WAIS Divide site, West Antarctica: bubble number-density estimates

Journal

JOURNAL OF GLACIOLOGY
Volume 57, Issue 204, Pages 629-638

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.3189/002214311797409677

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US National Science Foundation (NSF) [0539578, 0539232]
  2. NSF [0440817, 0230396, 0944348, 0537930, 0839093, 0538427, 0739780, 0944191]

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A surface cooling of similar to 1.7 degrees C occurred over the similar to two millennia prior to similar to 1700 CE at the West Antarctic ice sheet (WAIS) Divide site, based on trends in observed bubble number-density of samples from the WDC06A ice core, and on an independently constructed accumulation-rate history using annual-layer dating corrected for density variations and thinning from ice flow. Density increase and grain growth in polar firn are both controlled by temperature and accumulation rate, and the integrated effects are recorded in the number-density of bubbles as the firn changes to ice. Number-density is conserved in bubbly ice following pore close-off, allowing reconstruction of either paleotemperature or paleo-accumulation rate if the other is known. A quantitative late-Holocene paleoclimate reconstruction is presented for West Antarctica using data obtained from the WAIS Divide WDC06A ice core and a steady-state bubble number-density model. The resultant temperature history agrees closely with independent reconstructions based on stable-isotopic ratios of ice. The similar to 1.7 degrees C cooling trend observed is consistent with a decrease in Antarctic summer duration from changing orbital obliquity, although it remains possible that elevation change at the site contributed part of the signal. Accumulation rate and temperature dropped together, broadly consistent with control by saturation vapor pressure.

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