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  4. Changes in the atmospheric CH4 gradient between Greenland and Antarctica during the Holocene
 
research article

Changes in the atmospheric CH4 gradient between Greenland and Antarctica during the Holocene

Chappellaz, J.
•
Blunier, T.
•
Kints, S.
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July 1, 1997
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres

High-resolution records of atmospheric methane over the last 11,500 years have been obtained from two Antarctic ice cores (D47 and Byrd) and a Greenland core (Green-land Ice Core Project). These cores show similar trapping conditions for trace gases in the ice combined with a comparable sampling resolution; this together with a good relative chronology, provided by unequivocal CH4 features, allows a direct comparison of the synchronized Greenland and Antarctic records, and it reveals significant changes in the interpolar difference of CH4 mixing ratio with time. On the average, over the full Holocenc records, we find an interpolar difference of 44±7 ppbv. A minimum difference of 33±7 ppbv is observed from 7 to 5 kyr B.P. whereas the maximum gradient (50±3 ppbv) took place from 5 to 2.5 kyr B.P. A gradient of 44±4 ppbv is observed during the early Holocene (11.5 to 9.5 kyr B.P). We use a three-box model to translate the measured differences into quantitative contributions of methane sources in the tropics and the middle to high latitudes of the northern hemisphere. The model results support the previous interpretation that past natural CH4 sources mainly lay in tropical regions, but it also suggests that boreal regions provided a significant contribution to the CH4 budget especially at the start of the Holocene. The growing extent of peat bogs in boreal regions would also have counterbalanced the drying of the tropics over the second half of the Holocene. Finally, our model results suggest a large source increase in tropical regions from the late Holocene to the last millennium, which may partly be caused by anthropogenic emissions.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1029/97jd01017
Web of Science ID

WOS:A1997XM34700011

Author(s)
Chappellaz, J.
Blunier, T.
Kints, S.
Dallenbach, A.
Barnola, J. M.
Schwander, J.
Raynaud, D.
Stauffer, B.
Date Issued

1997-07-01

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Published in
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Volume

102

Issue

13

Start page

15987

End page

15997

Subjects

carbon isotope

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
SENSE  
Available on Infoscience
November 23, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/192597
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