The Nickel NICL Tour - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Nickel NICL Tour

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Title: The Nickel NICL Tour Working in the Cold Author: Joan Fitzpatrick Last modified by: thinkley Created Date: 3/1/2001 11:29:35 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Nickel NICL Tour


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The Nickel NICL Tour
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GISP 2D, 2114 m
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Detail of time-stratigraphic record in ice cores
  • In some cores, where accumulation rate is high,
    sub-annual (seasonal) records are preserved
  • Allows exact age determination of ice, for
    thousands of years in the past

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The National Ice Core Laboratory
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Holocene
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115KYBP
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But ice cores arent ONLY a tool forclimate
change research
  • One example
  • Ice sheets preserve trace elements deposited from
    the atmosphere
  • Gives natural (pre-industrial) abundances, as
    baseline for
  • modern, disturbed conditions

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Findings about trace elements
  • In pre-industrial times, quiescent worldwide
    volcano degassing contributed most of the masses
    of trace elements in the ice (much more than can
    be accounted for by the dust and sea salt
    present).

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Another example about the trace element record of
past times
  • Pollution to the Antarctic whats the evidence
    of when industrial pollution started to show up?
  • Tentative finding Lead (Pb) isotopes indicate
    that it first showed up in the 19th century, BUT
    there are intriguing strata of the same isotopic
    composition from three centuries before that.

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A third trace-element example
  • Volcanic ash blankets that fall onto the Earths
    surface - - are they big sources of extra trace
    metals?
  • Finding No, although plumes of quiescently
    degassing volcanoes have extra trace elements,
    big ash explosions only have the tiny amounts
    found in ordinary rock

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Where will the CO2 go after we run out of
gas(after a few centuries)
  • It will return (more slowly) to the various
    reservoirs in which we store carbon
  • on this planet
  • standing plants (small mass, rapid response)
  • soils (humus)
  • surface layers of ocean
  • deeper ocean
  • carbonate rocks (huge mass, v. slow response)

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New West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) coreto be
drilled during the IPY in 07 08
  • Goals and justification for this new core and
    site
  • Need 80Ky record, from high-accumulation zone,
  • hopefully with annual layers
  • Climate forcing by greenhouse gasses
  • Role of Antarc. in initiating rapid climate
    change
  • Relationship between northern, tropical and
    southern climates
  • Stability of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet and sea
    level change

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More detailed scientific questions
  • Are the climate changes during the anthropogenic
    era unprecedented?
  • How has climate varied during the last 10,000
    years?
  • Do solar variability and volcanic emission affect
    climate?
  • What was the role of the Antarctic in climate
    change as the last ice age was ending?
  • What are the interactions between terrestrial
    biology and biogeochemical cycles?
  • What are the interactions between southern ocean
    biology and biogeochemical cycles?
  • Are microorganisms metabolically active in
    ancient ice?
  • Does the biology within ice sheets reflect the
    climate when the ice was deposited?

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Ice cores - - not the only game in town.Other
paleoclimate proxies
  • 1. Tree rings
  • fine time resolution, fine areal emphasis
  • 2. Corals
  • rings like trees, but tell temp. chem. of
    oceans
  • 3. Ocean and lake sediments
  • very long time record, coarse resolution
  • 4. Spelean realm stalactites, stalagmites
  • Well dated, long records from groundwater.
  • 5. Packrat middens
  • Localized, long-term records from pollen

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THE END
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Ice Core Lab Floor Plan
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Core processing line in action
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Another (related) example
  • Do falls of volcanic ash (tephra) bring with them
    large amounts of excess, available trace metals,
    to their localities of deposition?
  • Tephra falls are preserved in ice

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Finding
  • Tephra is not a source of extra trace elements,
    to the oceans or land on which it falls
  • It has trace element abundance no higher than
    ordinary volcanic rock, of its type
  • (volcanic explosion are
    high-energy, high-entropy processes,
  • with little
    potential for fractionation)

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Relative roles of dust and volcano emissions as
sourcesof atmospheric deposition of trace metals
(to ice sheets).
  • From field and lab work measuring worldwide
    magnitude of volcano trace metal injections into
    the atmosphere
  • and amounts of trace metals in Antarctic ice
  • Points to the following
  • Volcanoes accounted for most of the atmospheric
    trace metals in the pre-industrial environment.
  • Only in very dusty times does dust account for a
    big fraction.
  • Hinkley et al., Earth and Planetary Science
    Letters, 1999 Matsumoto Hinkley, same journal,
    2001 other papers

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A. Countries with formal, dedicated ice core
storage labs
  • Argentina - - mountain cores
  • Australia - - Antarctic cores
  • Denmark - - Greenland cores
  • India - - mountain and polar cores
  • (under construction)
  • Japan - - Antarctic cores
  • U.S.A. - - polar cores

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B. Countries with substantial ice holdings and
facilities for analysis
  • China - - mountain and polar cores
  • France - - Antarctic cores
  • Germany - - polar cores
  • Russia - - polar and other cores
  • (some cores kept in ideal
    storage conditions
  • of the East Antarctic
    Plateau)
  • United Kingdom - - polar cores

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  1. Countries with expanding field acquisition and
    analytical programs, and planned or needed
    storage facilities
  • Brazil
  • Chile
  • Italy
  • Switzerland

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Storage conditions are favorable for preserving
records of atmospheric gases
  • Japanese lab stores ice at
  • 50o C.to prevent escape
  • of clathrate hydrates
  • U.S. lab stores ice at 36o C.
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