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Water Isotopic Signature of Surface Snow Metamorphism in Antarctica

Mathieu Casado, Alexandra Zuhr, Amaëlle Landais, Ghislain Picard, Laurent Arnaud, Giuliano Dreossi, Barbara Stenni, Frédéric Prié

202213 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

<p>Water isotope ratios of ice cores are a key source of information on past temperatures. Through fractionation within the hydrological cycle, temperature is imprinted in the water isotopic composition of snowfalls. However, this signal of climatic interest is modified after deposition when snow remains at the surface exposed to the atmosphere. Comparing time series of surface snow isotopic composition at Dome C with satellite observations of surface snow metamorphism, we found that long summer periods without precipitation favor surface snow metamorphism altering the surface snow isotopic  composition. Using excess parameters (combining dD, d<sup>17</sup>O, and d<sup>18</sup>O fractions) allow the identification of this alteration caused by sublimation and condensation of surface hoar. The combined measurement of all three isotopic compositions could help identifying ice core sections influenced by snow metamorphism in sites with very low snow accumulation.</p>

Topics & Concepts

SnowIce coreMetamorphismPrecipitationGlacierSurface waterEquilibrium fractionationGeologySublimation (psychology)Isotopic shiftFractionationIsotope fractionationIsotopeChemistryGeochemistryGeomorphologyOceanographyEnvironmental scienceMeteorologyQuantum mechanicsEnvironmental engineeringPsychologyPhysicsPsychotherapistOrganic chemistryCryospheric studies and observationsArctic and Antarctic ice dynamicsClimate change and permafrost