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research article

Atmospheric nitrous oxide during the last 140,000years

Schilt, Adrian
•
Baumgartner, Matthias
•
Schwander, Jakob
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November 1, 2010
Earth and Planetary Science Letters

Reconstructions of past atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases provide unique insight into the biogeochemical cycles and the past radiative forcing in the Earth's climate system. We present new measurements of atmospheric nitrous oxide along the ice cores of the North Greenland Ice Core Project and Talos Dome sites. Using records of several other ice cores, we are now able to establish the first complete composite nitrous oxide record reaching back to the beginning of the previous interglacial about 140,000. yr ago. On the basis of such composite ice core records, we further calculate the radiative forcing of the three most important greenhouse gases carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide during more than a full glacial-interglacial cycle. Nitrous oxide varies in line with climate, reaching very low concentrations of about 200 parts per billion by volume during Marine Isotope Stages 4 and 2, and showing substantial responses to millennial time scale climate variations during the last glacial. A large part of these millennial time scale variations can be explained by parallel changes in the sources of methane and nitrous oxide. However, as revealed by high-resolution measurements covering the Dansgaard/Oeschger events 17 to 15, the evolution of these two greenhouse gases may be decoupled on the centennial time scale. Carbon dioxide and methane concentrations do not reach interglacial levels in the course of millennial time scale climate variations during the last glacial. In contrast, nitrous oxide often reaches interglacial concentrations in response to both, glacial terminations and Dansgaard/Oeschger events. This indicates, from a biogeochemical point of view, similar drivers in both temporal cases. While carbon dioxide and methane concentrations are more strongly controlled by climate changes in high latitudes, nitrous oxide emissions changes may mainly stem from the ocean and/or from soils located at low latitudes. Accordingly, we speculate that high latitudes could play the leading role to trigger glacial terminations. © 2010 Elsevier B.V.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.epsl.2010.09.027
Web of Science ID

WOS:000285129200004

Author(s)
Schilt, Adrian
•
Baumgartner, Matthias
•
Schwander, Jakob
•
Buiron, Daphne
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Capron, Emilie
•
Chappellaz, Jerome
•
Loulergue, Laetitia
•
Schuepbach, Simon
•
Spahni, Renato
•
Fischer, Hubertus
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Date Issued

2010-11-01

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Published in
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Volume

300

Issue

1-2

Start page

33

End page

43

Subjects

Atmospheric concentration

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Atmospheric nitrous oxide

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Biogeochemical cycle

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Climate variation

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Earth's climate

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Glacial terminations

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Glacial-interglacial cycles

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Greenland

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High Latitudes

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High-resolution measurements

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Ice core

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Ice core records

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In-line

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Large parts

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Last glacial

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Low concentrations

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Low latitudes

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Marine isotope stages

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Methane concentrations

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Nitrous oxide

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Nitrous oxide emissions

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Paleo

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Parallel changes

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Parts per billion

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Radiative forcings

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Time-scales

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Anesthetics

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Atmospheric chemistry

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Biogeochemistry

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Carbon dioxide

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Climatology

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Concentration (process)

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Earth (planet)

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Ecology

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Glacial geology

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Global warming

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Greenhouse gases

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Ice

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Isotopes

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Methanation

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Methane

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Soil pollution

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Time measurement

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Nitrogen oxides

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atmospheric chemistry

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biogeochemical cycle

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carbon dioxide

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climate variation

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greenhouse gas

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ice core

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interglacial

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methane

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nitrous oxide

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radiative forcing

Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
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Available on Infoscience
November 23, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/192589
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