4.6 Article

Radiocarbon dating of alpine ice cores with the dissolved organic carbon (DOC) fraction

Journal

CRYOSPHERE
Volume 15, Issue 3, Pages 1537-1550

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/tc-15-1537-2021

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [CRSII2_154450, 200021_126515, 200021_182765]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [91837102, 41830644]
  3. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [200021_126515, CRSII2_154450, 200021_182765] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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This study introduces a new method of using the dissolved organic carbon (DOC) fraction for C-14 dating, which has shown comparable results to the traditional WIOC-C-14 dating approach. The experiment suggests that the DOC fraction may provide a valuable alternative for dating ice cores with low carbon content, showing potential for greater accuracy and precision with a smaller required ice mass.
High-alpine glaciers are valuable archives of past climatic and environmental conditions. The interpretation of the preserved signal requires a precise chronology. Radiocarbon (C-14) dating of the water-insoluble organic carbon (WIOC) fraction has become an important dating tool to constrain the age of ice cores from mid-latitude and low-latitude glaciers. However, in some cases this method is restricted by the low WIOC concentration in the ice. In this work, we report first C-14 dating results using the dissolved organic carbon (DOC) fraction, which is present at concentrations of at least a factor of 2 higher than the WIOC fraction. We evaluated this new approach by comparison to the established (WIOC)-C-14 dating based on parallel ice core sample sections from four different Eurasian glaciers covering an age range of several hundred to around 20 000 years; C-14 dating of the two fractions yielded comparable ages, with (WIOC)-C-14 revealing a slight, barely significant, systematic offset towards older ages comparable in magnitude with the analytical uncertainty. We attribute this offset to two effects of about equal size but opposite in direction: (i) in-situ-produced C-14 contributing to the DOC resulting in a bias towards younger ages and (ii) incompletely removed carbonates from particulate mineral dust (C-14-depleted) contributing to the WIOC fraction with a bias towards older ages. The estimated amount of in-situ-produced C-14 in the DOC fraction is smaller than the analytical uncertainty for most samples. Nevertheless, under extreme conditions, such as very high altitude and/or low snow accumulation rates, (DOC)-C-14 dating results need to be interpreted cautiously. While during DOC extraction the removal of inorganic carbon is monitored for completeness, the removal for WIOC samples was so far only assumed to be quantitative, at least for ice samples containing average levels of mineral dust. Here we estimated an average removal efficiency of 98 +/- 2 %, resulting in a small offset of the order of the current analytical uncertainty. Future optimization of the removal procedure has the potential to improve the accuracy and precision of (WIOC)-C-14 dating. With this study we demonstrate that using the DOC fraction for C-14 dating not only is a valuable alternative to the use of WIOC but also benefits from a reduced required ice mass of typically similar to 250 g to achieve comparable precision of around +/- 200 years. This approach thus has the potential of pushing radiocarbon dating of ice forward even to remote regions where the carbon content in the ice is particularly low.

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