The Cryosphere (Apr 2024)

Fifty years of firn evolution on Grigoriev ice cap, Tien Shan, Kyrgyzstan

  • H. Machguth,
  • A. Eichler,
  • A. Eichler,
  • M. Schwikowski,
  • M. Schwikowski,
  • M. Schwikowski,
  • S. Brütsch,
  • E. Mattea,
  • S. Kutuzov,
  • S. Kutuzov,
  • M. Heule,
  • R. Usubaliev,
  • S. Belekov,
  • V. N. Mikhalenko,
  • M. Hoelzle,
  • M. Kronenberg,
  • M. Kronenberg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-18-1633-2024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18
pp. 1633 – 1646

Abstract

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Grigoriev ice cap, located in the Tien Shan mountains of Kyrgyzstan, has a rich history of firn and ice core drilling starting as early as 1962. Here we extend the exceptional record and describe an 18 m firn core, drilled in February 2018 on the summit of Grigoriev ice cap, at 4600 m a.s.l. The core has been analyzed for firn stratigraphy, major ions, black carbon, water stable isotope ratios and total β activity. We find that the core covers 46±3 years and overlaps by 2 to 3 decades with legacy cores. A good agreement is found in major ion concentrations for the overlapping period. Concentrations of black carbon and major ions are reduced since the early 2000s, indicating the onset of meltwater runoff. Nevertheless, general concentration trends of these species are consistent with observations and Central Asian ice core records, since emissions were highest during periods when melt influence was negligible. The record of water stable isotopes does not reflect the strong increase of air temperatures during the last decades, implying that water stable isotope ratios ceased to be proxies of temperature variations at this site. Apart from runoff evidence, however, the firn's thermal regime appears remarkably unchanged. Firn temperatures in 2018 were the highest on record (∼-1.6 °C at ∼17 m depth). However, temperatures in 2023 are again similar to the early 2000s at ∼-2.5 °C. Furthermore, we find little change in net accumulation since the 1980s. We hypothesize (i) that firn temperatures are stabilized by the removal of latent heat through lateral meltwater runoff, and (ii) that mass loss by runoff is compensated by an increase in accumulation. Data from a nearby weather station support the latter hypothesis.