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Chemistry of polar ice (part II) • S & N cycles from ice core studies Robert DELMAS YESTERDAY • Chemical information is located in the ice matrix itself • Basic features of glaciochemistry - soluble vs insoluble - ion balance • Primary aerosol species - Sea salt. May be modified in ice records. Strong interaction with secondary sulfate aerosol - Continental dust: very high in glacial conditions Sulfur cycle at high southern latitudes SULFATE • MAJOR COMPONENT OF THE GLOBAL AEROSOL LOAD • CLIMATIC ROLE: Direct & indirect • DEPOSITED AS AN AEROSOL • AFFECTED BY « DRY DEPOSITION » EFFECT Excess-sulfate or nssSO4 : [nssSO4 ] = [SO4] - 0.25 [Na] nssSULFATE ORIGINS FOR CENTRAL ANTARCTICA • MARINE BIOGENIC ACTIVITY (gaseous DMS emission) • together with MSA In glacial conditions: an additional source (e.g. gypsum: CaSO4)? • • • • VOLCANIC ACTIVITY Continuous or sporadic Stratospheric pathway Tropospheric pathway (South America) • Antarctic volcanoes A tool to differentiate origins: S & O isotope measurements About Antarctic nsssulfate… • H2SO4 is formed from SO2 in gaseous or in liquid phase (see next) • H2SO4 may be scavenged by sea salt aerosol • Are sea salt and sulfate aerosol transported separately or internally mixed? Oxidation ways of SO2 (investigated by O isotope measurements) 1 Heterogeneous phase: SO2 + O3/H2O2 growth of existing aerosol particle, in particular sea salt 2 Gas-phase: SO2 + OH new aerosol particle Alexander, B., J. Savarino, N.I. Barkov, R.J. Delmas, and M.H. Thiemens, 2002 Alexander, B., M.H. Thiemens, J. Farquhar, A.J. Kaufman, J. Savarino, and R.J. Delmas, 2003 Two kinds of sulfate in the Antarctic 10Be is attached to background aerosol Methanesulfonic acid (HCH3SO3) • Directly derived from DMS • Aerosol or gas? • Specific tracer of marine biogenic activity (from DMS) • Tracer of El Niño events? • Ratio MSA/nssSO4 commonly used • Strong post-deposition effect • Concentrations generally high in glacial conditions Volcanic sulfate ECM: ElectroConductometric Measurement • Sulfuric acid peaks •Sulfuric acid peaks Tambora period (1800-1820) Volcanic eruptions recorded at various Antarctic sites 1259 AD 1964-65 South Pole Volcanism recorded at Vostok Ash layers 1259 AD eruption: sulfate and fluoride Sulfate in Antarctica Sulfate in Greenland The turn of the century in Greenland Volcanic eruptions in the Northern Hemisphere Antarctic Peninsula Sulfate and MSA in Antarctic coastal regions • In James Ross Island snow Seasonal variations in South Pole snow • MSA is labile in the upper firn layers MSA at South Pole El Niño events ? MSA: important loss in the upper firn layers • VOSTOK • MSA is released to the interstitial air but remains stored in the firn layers • It is then entrapped again by ice below close-off MSA in Antarctic ice cores Are this data reliable? In Greenland Isotope measurements related to the sulfur cycle • S-isotopes in SO4 • O isotopes in SO4 Years AD Dronning Maud Land (german core) Depth Fluctuation of S-isotopic composition over 2 centuries Annual mean A 100% Continental source only volcanic % Sources 80% fter/volc 60% fbm fsm 40% 20% 0% FB1 FB2 FB3 FB4 FB5 FB6 1990 FB8 1800 B 100% Dronning Maud Land % Sources 80% fcont 60% fbm A continental source + a volcanic source fsm 40% 20% 0% FB1 FB2 FB3 FB4 FB5 FB6 FB8 NITROGEN CYCLE • UP TO NOW, NOT UNDERSTOOD • There are two major species in polar ice related to this cycle: NO3 and NH4 • MAY EXIST in the ATMOSPHERE as a GAS (HNO3) or an AEROSOL • VERY COMPLEX TRANSFER FUNCTION for HNO3 • IMPORTANT ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES like O3 hole, biomass burning or photochemistry (in-situ production) Strong decrease in upper firn layers During ice ages, nitrate is attached to dust NITRATE IN ANTARCTIC CORES EPICA 1.2 1 Biomass burning? EPICA 0.8 2 NO3 µEq/l Accumulation cm/yr 1.5 2.5 0.4 3 3.5 0 4 0 400 200 METERS 600 Dome F Anthropogenic pollution in Greenland Lead pollution in Greenland N-isotope measurements in NO3 - Greenland Ammonium • Samples easily contaminated • Extremely weak in central Antarctic snow (<1 ppb) • In coastal regions higher concentrations linked to penguins Carboxylic acids at Summit Conclusions (1) • Glaciochemical work is much more sophisticated and difficult than water stable isotope measurements and gas measurements • Prioritiy recently given to aerosol research could give a boost to glaciochemistry • It can be envisaged to investigate in the future viruses, bacteria, microorganisms … which are attached to aerosol particles, in particular in nonpolar regions • More ice cores in tropical and mid-latitude mountains to understand continental aerosol and source regions of polar dust Conclusions (2) • Glaciochemistry is still a very open domain • Processes occurring in firn have to be confirmed in particular for NO3, Cl and MSA • The interaction between sea salt and sulfate aerosol has to be taken into account • The role of glacial dust on atmospheric chemistry has to be investigated • Na as an indicator of sea ice extent in the past • CaNO3 as a tracer of biomass burning in Antarctica