Advances in Climate Change Research (Dec 2020)

A shallow ice core from East Greenland showing a reduction in black carbon during 1990–2016

  • Zhi-Heng Du,
  • Cun-De Xiao,
  • Ting-Feng Dou,
  • Chuan-Jin Li,
  • Ming-Hu Ding,
  • Sangeeta Sharma,
  • Xiang-Yu Ma,
  • Shi-Meng WANG,
  • Wang-Bin Zhang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
pp. 360 – 369

Abstract

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This study reports on the measurements of ion and refractory black carbon (rBC) concentrations in a shallow (10.96 m) ice core sample which was drilled from the field site of the East Greenland Ice Core Project (EGRIP) in July, 2016. The results provide a recent record of rBC deposition in the East Greenland ice sheet from 1990 to 2016. The annual variability in oxygen (δ18O) and hydrogen (δD) isotopic compositions indicated that notably warm events occurred since 2008. Peaks in rBC occurred during summer seasons, which may be attributed to the burning of biomass in boreal summer. The rBC record and analysis of historical air trajectories using the HYSPLIT model indicated that anthropogenic BC emissions from Russia, North America and Europe contributed to the majority of rBC deposition in the Greenland region, and a reduction in anthropogenic BC consumption in these areas played a dominant role in the decrease in BC concentrations since 2000. This record also suggests that the emissions from the East Asian region (China) contributed very little to the recorded BC concentrations in East Greenland ice core. The model results indicated that radiative forcing due to BC had decreased significantly since 1990, and had remained below 0.02 W m−2 since 2000.

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