Abstract

Abstract. Typically, gas transport through firn is modeled in the context of an idealized firn column. However, in natural firn, imperfections are present, which can alter transport dynamics and therefore reduce the accuracy of reconstructed climate records. For example, ice layers have been found in several firn cores collected in the polar regions. Here, we examined the effects of two ice layers found in a NEEM, Greenland firn core on gas transport through the firn. These ice layers were found to have permeability values of 3.0 and 4.0 × 10−10 m2, and are therefore not impermeable layers. However, the shallower ice layer was found to be significantly less permeable than the surrounding firn, and can therefore retard gas transport. Large closed bubbles were found in the deeper ice layer, which will have an altered gas composition than that expected because they were closed near the surface after the water phase was present. The bubbles in this layer represent 12% of the expected closed porosity of this firn layer after the firn-ice transition depth is reached, and will therefore bias the future ice core gas record. The permeability and thickness of the ice layers at the North Greenland Eemian Ice Drilling (NEEM) site suggest that they do not disrupt the firn-air concentration profiles and that they do not need to be accounted for in gas transport models at NEEM.

Highlights

  • In the colder regions of an ice sheet, glacial ice is formed from the densification of snow due to the overburden pressure of successive precipitation

  • We identified two ice layers in the North Greenland Eemian Ice Drilling (NEEM) firn core at 27.3 and 44.3 m (Fig. 1)

  • Our study suggests that the ice layers found at the NEEM site are not thick enough to cause a disruption in the firn-air profile

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Summary

Introduction

In the colder regions of an ice sheet, glacial ice is formed from the densification of snow due to the overburden pressure of successive precipitation. This change from snow to ice occurs over hundreds of years in a region at the top of the ice sheet, known as the “firn layer”. An inherent age difference ( age) exists between the ice and the bubbles it traps, because of the interconnected pore space in the firn layer (Schwander and Stauffer, 1984). This age is an important parameter for interpreting ice-core records

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