Abstract

Abstract. A new ice core paleothermometer is introduced based on the temperature dependent diffusion of the stable water isotopes in the firn. A new parameter called differential diffusion length is defined as the difference between the diffusion length of the two stable water isotopologues 2H1H16O and 1H218O. A model treatment of the diffusion process of the firn and the ice is presented along with a method of retrieving the diffusion signal from the ice core record of water isotopes using spectral methods. The model shows how the diffusion process is highly dependent on the inter-annual variations in the surface temperatures. It results in a diffusion length longer than if the firn was isothermal. The longer diffusion length can be explained by the strong nonlinearly behaviour of the saturation pressure over ice in the range of the surface temperature fluctuations. The method has been tested on δ18O and δD measurements, spanning the transition from the last glacial to the holocene, from the NorthGRIP ice core. The surface temperature reconstruction based on the differential diffusion resembles other temperature reconstructions for the NorthGRIP ice core. However, the Allerød warming is seen to be significantly warmer than observed in other ice core based temperature reconstructions. The mechanisms behind this behaviour are not fully understood. The method shows the need of an expansion of high resolution stable water isotope datasets from ice cores. However, the new ice core paleothermometer presented here will give valuable insight into past climate, through the physical process of isotope diffusion in the firn column of ice sheets.

Highlights

  • The temperature dependency of stable water isotopes in precipitation has been observed since the 1950s (Dansgaard, 1953, 1964; Dansgaard et al, 1969)

  • The dataset of high resolution measurements of δ18O and δD have to be expanded to see if the Allerød warming is just an anomaly in the temperature reconstruction by differential diffusion or if such deviations from the isotope temperatures are common in the record when using differential diffusion to reconstruct surface temperatures

  • The methods have been applied to a dataset of highresolution measurements of the two stable water isotopes δ18O and δD from the glacial transition

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Summary

Introduction

The temperature dependency of stable water isotopes in precipitation has been observed since the 1950s (Dansgaard, 1953, 1964; Dansgaard et al, 1969). This dependency has been used to reconstruct past climate from ice cores The isotope-temperature relationship does not consistently hold through time. Other methods have been used to reconstruct the past temperature record from ice cores. Borehole thermometry has been used to constrain the stable water isotope temperature proxy (Johnsen et al., 1995) giving an estimate for the past surface temperature at the precipitation site.

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