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  • 2010-2014  (36)
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  • 1
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Gkinis, Vasileios; Simonsen, Sebastian B; Buchardt, Susanne L; White, James W C; Vinther, Bo Møllesøe (2014): Water isotope diffusion rates from the NorthGRIP ice core for the last 16,000 years – Glaciological and paleoclimatic implications. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 405, 132-141, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2014.08.022
    Publication Date: 2024-07-19
    Description: A high resolution (0.05 m) water isotopic record (d18O) is available from the NorthGRIP ice core. In this study we look into the water isotope diffusion history as estimated by the spectral characteristics of the d18O time series covering the last 16,000 years. The diffusion of water vapor in the porous medium of the firn pack attenuates the initial isotopic signal, predominantly having an impact on the high frequency components of the power spectrum. Higher temperatures induce higher rates of smoothing and thus the signal can be used as a firn paleothermometer. We use a water isotope diffusion model coupled to a steady-state densification model in order to infer the temperature signal from the site, assuming the accumulation and strain rate history as estimated using the GICC05 layer counted chronology and a Dansgaard-Johnsen ice flow model. The temperature reconstruction accurately captures the timing and magnitude of the Bølling-Allerød and Younger Dryas transitions. A Holocene climatic optimum is seen between 7 and 9 ky b2k with an apparent cooling trend thereafter. Our temperature estimate for the Holocene climatic optimum, points to a necessary adjustment of the ice thinning function indicating that the ice flow model overestimates past accumulation rates by about 10% at 8 ky b2k. This result, is supported by recent gas isotopic fractionation studies proposing a similar reduction for glacial conditions. Finally, the record presents a climatic variability over the Holocene spanning millennial and centennial scales with a profound cooling occurring at approximately 4000 years b2k. The new reconstruction technique is able to provide past temperature estimates by overcoming the issues apparent in the use of the classical d18O slope method. It can at the same time resolve temperature signals at low and high frequencies.
    Keywords: NGRIP; North Greenland Ice Core Project
    Type: dataset publication series
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Vinther, Bo Møllesøe; Jones, Philip D; Briffa, Keith R; Clausen, Henrik Brink; Andersen, Katrine K; Dahl-Jensen, Dorthe; Johnsen, Sigfús Jóhann (2010): Climatic signals in multiple highly resolved stable isotope records from Greenland. Quaternary Science Reviews, 29(3-4), 522-538, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2009.11.002
    Publication Date: 2024-07-19
    Description: Twenty ice cores drilled in medium to high accumulation areas of the Greenland ice sheet have been used to extract seasonally resolved stable isotope records. Relationships between the seasonal stable isotope data and Greenland and Icelandic temperatures as well as atmospheric flow are investigated for the past 150-200 years. The winter season stable isotope data are found to be influenced by the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) and very closely related to SW Greenland temperatures. The linear correlation between the first principal component of the winter season stable isotope data and Greenland winter temperatures is 0.71 for seasonally resolved data and 0.83 for decadally filtered data. The summer season stable isotope data display higher correlations with Stykkisholmur summer temperatures and North Atlantic SST conditions than with SW Greenland temperatures. The linear correlation between Stykkisholmur summer temperatures and the first principal component of the summer season stable isotope data is 0.56, increasing to 0.66 for decadally filtered data. Winter season stable isotope data from ice core records that reach more than 1400 years back in time suggest that the warm period that began in the 1920s raised southern Greenland temperatures to the same level as those that prevailed during the warmest intervals of the Medieval Warm Period some 900-1300 years ago. This observation is supported by a southern Greenland ice core borehole temperature inversion. As Greenland borehole temperature inversions are found to correspond better with winter stable isotope data than with summer or annual average stable isotope data it is suggested that a strong local Greenland temperature signal can be extracted from the winter stable isotope data even on centennial to millennial time scales.
    Type: dataset publication series
    Format: application/zip, 8 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-07-19
    Description: Abstract of Bazin et al. (2013): An accurate and coherent chronological framework is essential for the interpretation of climatic and environmental records obtained from deep polar ice cores. Until now, one common ice core age scale had been developed based on an inverse dating method (Datice), combining glaciological modelling with absolute and stratigraphic markers between 4 ice cores covering the last 50 ka (thousands of years before present) (Lemieux-Dudon et al., 2010). In this paper, together with the companion paper of Veres et al. (2013), we present an extension of this work back to 800 ka for the NGRIP, TALDICE, EDML, Vostok and EDC ice cores using an improved version of the Datice tool. The AICC2012 (Antarctic Ice Core Chronology 2012) chronology includes numerous new gas and ice stratigraphic links as well as improved evaluation of background and associated variance scenarios. This paper concentrates on the long timescales between 120-800 ka. In this framework, new measurements of d18Oatm over Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 11-12 on EDC and a complete d18Oatm record of the TALDICE ice cores permit us to derive additional orbital gas age constraints. The coherency of the different orbitally deduced ages (from d18Oatm, dO2/N2 and air content) has been verified before implementation in AICC2012. The new chronology is now independent of other archives and shows only small differences, most of the time within the original uncertainty range calculated by Datice, when compared with the previous ice core reference age scale EDC3, the Dome F chronology, or using a comparison between speleothems and methane. For instance, the largest deviation between AICC2012 and EDC3 (5.4 ka) is obtained around MIS 12. Despite significant modifications of the chronological constraints around MIS 5, now independent of speleothem records in AICC2012, the date of Termination II is very close to the EDC3 one. Abstract of Veres et al. (2013): The deep polar ice cores provide reference records commonly employed in global correlation of past climate events. However, temporal divergences reaching up to several thousand years (ka) exist between ice cores over the last climatic cycle. In this context, we are hereby introducing the Antarctic Ice Core Chronology 2012 (AICC2012), a new and coherent timescale developed for four Antarctic ice cores, namely Vostok, EPICA Dome C (EDC), EPICA Dronning Maud Land (EDML) and Talos Dome (TALDICE), alongside the Greenlandic NGRIP record. The AICC2012 timescale has been constructed using the Bayesian tool Datice (Lemieux-Dudon et al., 2010) that combines glaciological inputs and data constraints, including a wide range of relative and absolute gas and ice stratigraphic markers. We focus here on the last 120 ka, whereas the companion paper by Bazin et al. (2013) focuses on the interval 120-800 ka. Compared to previous timescales, AICC2012 presents an improved timing for the last glacial inception, respecting the glaciological constraints of all analyzed records. Moreover, with the addition of numerous new stratigraphic markers and improved calculation of the lock-in depth (LID) based on d15N data employed as the Datice background scenario, the AICC2012 presents a slightly improved timing for the bipolar sequence of events over Marine Isotope Stage 3 associated with the seesaw mechanism, with maximum differences of about 600 yr with respect to the previous Datice-derived chronology of Lemieux-Dudon et al. (2010), hereafter denoted LD2010. Our improved scenario confirms the regional differences for the millennial scale variability over the last glacial period: while the EDC isotopic record (events of triangular shape) displays peaks roughly at the same time as the NGRIP abrupt isotopic increases, the EDML isotopic record (events characterized by broader peaks or even extended periods of high isotope values) reached the isotopic maximum several centuries before. It is expected that the future contribution of both other long ice core records and other types of chronological constraints to the Datice tool will lead to further refinements in the ice core chronologies beyond the AICC2012 chronology. For the time being however, we recommend that AICC2012 be used as the preferred chronology for the Vostok, EDC, EDML and TALDICE ice core records, both over the last glacial cycle (this study), and beyond (following Bazin et al., 2013). The ages for NGRIP in AICC2012 are virtually identical to those of GICC05 for the last 60.2 ka, whereas the ages beyond are independent of those in GICC05modelext (as in the construction of AICC2012, the GICC05modelext was included only via the background scenarios and not as age markers). As such, where issues of phasing between Antarctic records included in AICC2012 and NGRIP are involved, the NGRIP ages in AICC2012 should therefore be taken to avoid introducing false offsets. However for issues involving only Greenland ice cores, there is not yet a strong basis to recommend superseding GICC05modelext as the recommended age scale for Greenland ice cores.
    Keywords: EPICA; European Project for Ice Coring in Antarctica; Greenland Ice Core Projects; GRIP/GISP/NGRIP
    Type: dataset publication series
    Format: application/zip, 16 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 4
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Rasmussen, Sune Olander; Abbott, Peter M; Blunier, Thomas; Bourne, Mark; Brook, Edward J; Buchardt, Susanne L; Buizert, Christo; Chappellaz, Jérôme A; Clausen, Henrik Brink; Cook, Eliza; Dahl-Jensen, Dorthe; Davies, Siwan M; Guillevic, Myriam; Kipfstuhl, Sepp; Laepple, Thomas; Seierstad, Inger K; Severinghaus, Jeffrey P; Steffensen, Jørgen Peder; Stowasser, Christopher; Svensson, Anders M; Vallelonga, Paul T; Vinther, Bo Møllesøe; Wilhelms, Frank; Winstrup, Mai (2013): A first chronology for the North Greenland Eemian Ice Drilling (NEEM) ice core. Climate of the Past, 9(6), 2713-2730, https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-9-2713-2013
    Publication Date: 2024-07-19
    Description: A stratigraphy-based chronology for the North Greenland Eemian Ice Drilling (NEEM) ice core has been derived by transferring the annual layer counted Greenland Ice Core Chronology 2005 (GICC05) and its model extension (GICC05modelext) from the NGRIP core to the NEEM core using 787 match points of mainly volcanic origin identified in the electrical conductivity measurement (ECM) and dielectrical profiling (DEP) records. Tephra horizons found in both the NEEM and NGRIP ice cores are used to test the matching based on ECM and DEP and provide five additional horizons used for the timescale transfer. A thinning function reflecting the accumulated strain along the core has been determined using a Dansgaard-Johnsen flow model and an isotope-dependent accumulation rate parameterization. Flow parameters are determined from Monte Carlo analysis constrained by the observed depth-age horizons. In order to construct a chronology for the gas phase, the ice age-gas age difference (Delta age) has been reconstructed using a coupled firn densification-heat diffusion model. Temperature and accumulation inputs to the Delta age model, initially derived from the water isotope proxies, have been adjusted to optimize the fit to timing constraints from d15N of nitrogen and high-resolution methane data during the abrupt onset of Greenland interstadials. The ice and gas chronologies and the corresponding thinning function represent the first chronology for the NEEM core, named GICC05modelext-NEEM-1. Based on both the flow and firn modelling results, the accumulation history for the NEEM site has been reconstructed. Together, the timescale and accumulation reconstruction provide the necessary basis for further analysis of the records from NEEM.
    Keywords: NEEM; NGRIP; North Greenland Eemian Ice Drilling; North Greenland Ice Core Project
    Type: dataset publication series
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-07-19
    Description: We here present a synchronization of the NGRIP, GRIP, and GISP2 ice cores based mainly on volcanic events over the period 14.9-32.45 ka b2k (before AD 2000), corresponding to Marine Isotope Stage 2 (MIS 2) and the end of MIS 3. The matching provides a basis for applying the recent NGRIP-based Greenland Ice Core Chronology 2005 (GICC05) time scale to the GRIP and GISP2 ice cores, thereby making it possible to compare the synchronized palaeoclimate profiles of the cores in detail and to identify relative accumulation differences between the cores. Based on the matching, a period of anomalous high accumulation rates in the GISP2 ice core is detected within the period 16.5-18.3 ka b2k. The d18O and [Ca2+] profiles of the three cores are presented on the common GICC05 time scale and generally show excellent agreement across the stadial-interstadial transitions and across the two characteristic dust events in Greenland Stadial 3. However, large differences between the d18O and [Ca2+] profiles of the three cores are seen in the same period as the 7-9% increase in the GISP2 accumulation rate. We conclude that changes of the atmospheric circulation are likely to have occurred in this period, altering the spatial gradients in Greenland and resulting in larger variations between the records.
    Keywords: Depth, reference; Greenland; Greenland Ice Core Projects; GRIP; GRIP/GISP/NGRIP; ISTUK; ISTUK electromechanical drill; NGRIP; North Greenland Ice Core Project; Sampling/drilling ice
    Type: dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 318 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-07-19
    Keywords: Age; AGE; Calculated; CRETE_1974; Greenland; Ice_core_diverse; Sampling/drilling ice; THERM; Thermal drill; δ18O, water
    Type: dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 5687 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-07-19
    Keywords: Age; AGE; CRETE_1974; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DYE; DYE-3; DYE-3_18C; DYE-3_20D; DYE-3_4B; Electromechanical drill; EMD; Event label; GISP; GISP2-D; Greenland; GRIP; Ice_core_diverse; ICEDRILL; Ice drill; ISTUK; ISTUK electromechanical drill; Milcent; Renland; Sampling/drilling ice; SITE_A_Ice-Core_1_1985; SITE_B_Ice-Core; SITE_D_Ice-Core; SITE_E_Ice-Core; SITE_G_Ice-Core; THERM; Thermal drill; δ18O, water; δ Deuterium, water
    Type: dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 5404 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2024-07-19
    Keywords: Age; AGE; Calculated; DYE; DYE-3; Greenland; ISTUK; ISTUK electromechanical drill; Sampling/drilling ice; δ18O, water
    Type: dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 5712 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2024-07-19
    Keywords: Age; AGE; Calculated; Greenland; GRIP; ISTUK; ISTUK electromechanical drill; Sampling/drilling ice; δ18O, water
    Type: dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 5716 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2024-07-19
    Keywords: Age; AGE; CRETE_1974; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DYE; DYE-3; DYE-3_18C; DYE-3_20D; DYE-3_4B; Electromechanical drill; EMD; Event label; GISP; GISP2-D; Greenland; GRIP; Ice_core_diverse; ICEDRILL; Ice drill; ISTUK; ISTUK electromechanical drill; Milcent; Renland; Sampling/drilling ice; SITE_A_Ice-Core_1_1985; SITE_B_Ice-Core; SITE_D_Ice-Core; SITE_E_Ice-Core; SITE_G_Ice-Core; THERM; Thermal drill; δ18O, water; δ Deuterium, water
    Type: dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 5404 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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