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research article

Continuous methane measurements from a late Holocene Greenland ice core: Atmospheric and in-situ signals

Rhodes, Rachael H.
•
Fain, Xavier
•
Stowasser, Christopher
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April 1, 2013
Earth and Planetary Science Letters

Ancient air trapped inside bubbles in ice cores can now be analysed for methane concentration utilising a laser spectrometer coupled to a continuous melter system. We present a new ultra-high resolution record of atmospheric methane variability over the last 1800yr obtained from continuous analysis of a shallow ice core from the North Greenland Eemian project (NEEM-2011-S1) during a 4-week laboratory-based measurement campaign. Our record faithfully replicates the form and amplitudes of multi-decadal oscillations previously observed in other ice cores and demonstrates the detailed depth resolution (5.3cm), rapid acquisition time (30mday-1) and good long-term reproducibility (2.6%, 2σ) of the continuous measurement technique.In addition, we report the detection of high frequency ice core methane signals of non-atmospheric origin. Firstly, measurements of air from the firn-ice transition region and an interval of ice core dating from 1546-1560 AD (gas age) resolve apparently quasi-annual scale methane oscillations. Traditional gas chromatography measurements on discrete ice samples confirm these signals and indicate peak-to-peak amplitudes of ca. 22 parts per billion (ppb). We hypothesise that these oscillations result from staggered bubble close-off between seasonal layers of contrasting density during time periods of sustained multi-year atmospheric methane change. Secondly, we report the detection of abrupt (20-100. cm depth interval), high amplitude (35-80. ppb excess) methane spikes in the NEEM ice that are reproduced by discrete measurements. We show for the first time that methane spikes present in thin and infrequent layers in polar, glacial ice are accompanied by elevated concentrations of carbon- and nitrogen-based chemical impurities, and suggest that biological in-situ production may be responsible. © 2013 Elsevier B.V.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.epsl.2013.02.034
Web of Science ID

WOS:000320087900002

Author(s)
Rhodes, Rachael H.
Fain, Xavier
Stowasser, Christopher
Blunier, Thomas
Chappellaz, Jerome
McConnell, Joseph R.
Romanini, Daniele
Mitchell, Logan E.
Brook, Edward J.
Date Issued

2013-04-01

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Published in
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Volume

368

Start page

9

End page

19

Subjects

Cryobiology

•

Firn

•

Greenland

•

Ice core

•

Late Holocene

•

Atmospheric chemistry

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Gas chromatography

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Methanation

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Methane

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Signal detection

•

Ice

•

atmospheric chemistry

•

carbon

•

concentration (composition)

•

cryobiology

•

firn

•

Holocene

•

ice core

•

methane

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nitrogen

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NorthGRIP

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paleoclimate

•

Arctic

•

Azadirachta indica

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/20.500.14299/192617
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