First sulfur isotope measurements in central Greenland ice cores along the preindustrial and industrial periods
Author(s) -
Patris Nicolas,
Delmas Robert,
Legrand Michel,
De Angelis Martine,
Ferron Francisco A.,
Stiévenard Michel,
Jouzel Jean
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2001jd000672
Subject(s) - sulfate , ice core , sulfate aerosol , groenlandia , geology , arctic , sulfur , volcano , δ34s , sulfur cycle , environmental science , oceanography , atmospheric sciences , ice sheet , geochemistry , stratosphere , chemistry , paleontology , quartz , organic chemistry , fluid inclusions
Sulfur isotopes of sulfate have been measured in a discontinuous set of polar ice core samples from Summit, central Greenland, covering the preindustrial (from the fourteenth to the eighteenth century) and industrial (from 1872 to 1969 A.D.) periods. Results have been used to estimate the different source contributions to the deposited sulfate and their evolution along the last centuries. They indicate that the preindustrial background sulfate budget is slightly dominated on a year‐round average by marine biogenic emissions, amounting to close to half of the non‐sea‐salt sulfate (49%). The second contribution is provided by continental sources of secondary sulfate, including background volcanism and, to a lesser extent, continental biota (44% of the non‐sea‐salt sulfate). Sulfur emitted by relatively weak eruptions is found to be largely depleted in 34 S compared to bulk volcanic S, suggesting an efficient washout of the heavier isotope during the tropospheric transport. The impact of human‐driven emissions on the sulfate deposited in central Greenland ice is visible in isotope data as early as 1870 A.D. The isotopic signature of anthropogenic sulfur deposited during the twentieth century is found to be constant (δ 34 S ≈ +3.0 ± 1.5‰), regardless of the changes of dominant source regions and emission processes. This signature is slightly but measurably lighter than the one reported for Arctic haze pollution events.
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