Original Research Papers

Long-term trends of mono-carboxylic acids in Antarctica: comparison of changes in sources and transport processes at the two EPICA deep drilling sites

Authors:

Abstract

We present here the first profiles of acetate and formate concentrations in Antarctic ice for time periods that include the great climatic changes of the past. Data are from two Antarctic deep ice cores recovered on the central East Antarctic Plateau (EDC) and in the Dronning Maud Land (EDML) facing the Atlantic Ocean (European EPICA Project). Except the sporadic arrival of diluted continental plumes during glacial extrema, the main source of acetate deposited over the EDC does not seem to have changed significantly over the past 300 kyr and is related to marine biogenic activity. A more detailed study of the past 55 kyr leads to the conclusion that acetate reaching the EDML during a large part of the last glacial maximum was emitted by the Patagonian continental biomass and was uptaken along with nitric acid at the surface of mineral dust. Changes in formate concentrations are characterised by less scattered and lower values at both sites during glacial periods. We propose that the present marine source of formic acid (Legrand et al.,2004) drastically decreased but did not completely vanish under cold climate conditions, whereas the share of methane oxidation in formic acid production became prominent.

Keywords:

ice corespolar atmosphereformic acidacetic acidclimatic cycles
  • Year: 2012
  • Volume: 64 Issue: 1
  • Page/Article: 17331
  • DOI: 10.3402/tellusb.v64i0.17331
  • Submitted on 26 May 2011
  • Accepted on 25 Jan 2011
  • Published on 1 Jan 2012
  • Peer Reviewed