Abstract

Large volcanic eruptions occurring in the last glacial period can be detected in terms of their deposited sulfuric acid in continuous ice cores. Here we employ continuous sulfate and sulfur records from three Greenland and three Antarctic ice cores to estimate the emission strength, the frequency and the climatic forcing of large volcanic eruptions that occurred during the second half of the last glacial period and the early Holocene, 60–9 ka years before AD 2000 (b2k). The ice cores are synchronized over most of the investigated interval making it possible to distinguish large eruptions with a global sulfate distribution from eruptions detectable in one hemisphere only. Due to limited data resolution and to a large variability in the sulfate background signal, particularly in the Greenland glacial climate, we only detect Greenland sulfate depositions larger than 20 kg km−2 and Antarctic sulfate depositions larger than 10 kg km−2. With those restrictions, we identify 1113 volcanic eruptions in Greenland and 740 eruptions in Antarctica within the 51 ka period – where the sulfate deposition of 85 eruptions is defined at both poles (bipolar eruptions). Based on the relative Greenland and Antarctic sulfate deposition, we estimate the latitudinal band of the bipolar eruptions and assess their approximate climatic forcing based on established methods. The climate forcing of the five largest eruptions is estimated to be higher than −70 W m−2. Twenty-seven of the identified bipolar eruptions are larger than any volcanic eruption occurring in the last 2500 years and 69 eruptions are estimated to have larger sulfur emission strengths than the VEI-7 Tambora eruption that occurred in Indonesia in 1815 AD. The frequency of eruptions larger than the typical VEI-7 (VEI-8) eruption by the comparison of sulfur emission strength is found to be 5.3 (7) times higher than estimated from geological evidence. Throughout the investigated period, the frequency of volcanic eruptions is rather constant and comparable to that of recent times. During the deglacial period (16–9 ka b2k), however, there is a notable increase in the frequency of volcanic events recorded in Greenland and an obvious increase in the fraction of very large eruptions. For Antarctica, the deglacial period cannot be distinguished from other periods. These volcanoes documented in ice cores provide atmospheric sulfate burden and climate forcing for further research on climate impact and understanding the mechanism of the Earth system.

Highlights

  • The dispersal of gas, aerosols and ash particles by volcanic eruptions play a major role in the climate system (Gao et al, 2007; Robock, 2000)

  • For the last 1200 to 2500 years, the ice-core based volcanic forcing records derived from Greenland and Antarctica (Crowley and Unterman, 2013; Gao et al, 2008; Toohey and Sigl, 2017) provide an essential record for climate model simulations (Jungclaus et al, 2017) supporting detection and attribution studies (Schurer et al, 2014) including those applied in the IPCC, but so far the global ice-core based volcanic record of the last glacial period is poorly documented

  • We investigate the variability in eruption frequency and sulfur emission strength with the DO cycles by separating the detected volcanic eruptions according to climate of ‘cold’ and ‘milder’ periods, which the onset and termination of DO events defined by Rasmussen et al (2014)

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Summary

Introduction

The dispersal of gas, aerosols and ash particles by volcanic eruptions play a major role in the climate system (Gao et al, 2007; Robock, 2000). Several studies have reconstructed the volcanic sulfate deposition for part or all of the Holocene in Greenland (Cole-Dai et al, 2009; Gao et al, 2008; Sigl et al, 2013) or in Antarctica (Kurbatov et al, 2006; Castellano et al, 2004; Plummer et al, 2012; Nardin et al, 2020; Cole-Dai et al, 2021). Sigl et al (2015) applied accurately dated ice cores synchronized between the two hemispheres to reconstruct global volcanism over the last 2500 years. This so-called bipolar synchronization allows to distinguish large global eruptions from those of hemispheric or more regional impact. Prior to the Holocene no bipolar volcanic sulfate deposition record is currently available from ice cores

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