Water-soluble organic carbon in snow and ice deposited at Alpine, Greenland, and Antarctic sites: a critical review of available data and their atmospheric relevance

While it is now recognized that organic matter dominates the present-day atmospheric aerosol load over continents, its sources remain poorly known. The studies of organic species or organic fractions trapped in ice cores may help to overcome this lack of knowledge. Available data on the dissolved (o...

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Main Authors: M. Legrand, S. Preunkert, B. Jourdain, J. Guilhermet, X. Fa{ï}n, I. Alekhina, J. R. Petit
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2013-09-01
Series:Climate of the Past
Online Access:http://www.clim-past.net/9/2195/2013/cp-9-2195-2013.pdf
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spelling doaj-dfa82ff18b8242a1bb9c6241a752dbe12020-11-24T23:37:54ZengCopernicus PublicationsClimate of the Past1814-93241814-93322013-09-01952195221110.5194/cp-9-2195-2013Water-soluble organic carbon in snow and ice deposited at Alpine, Greenland, and Antarctic sites: a critical review of available data and their atmospheric relevanceM. LegrandS. PreunkertB. JourdainJ. GuilhermetX. Fa{ï}nI. AlekhinaJ. R. PetitWhile it is now recognized that organic matter dominates the present-day atmospheric aerosol load over continents, its sources remain poorly known. The studies of organic species or organic fractions trapped in ice cores may help to overcome this lack of knowledge. Available data on the dissolved (or total) organic carbon (DOC or TOC) content of snow and ice often appear largely inconsistent, and, until now, no critical review has been conducted to understand the causes of these inconsistencies. To draw a more consistent picture of the organic carbon amount present in solid precipitation that accumulates on cold glaciers, we here review available data and, when needed, complete the data set with analyses of selected samples. The different data sets are then discussed by considering the age (modern versus pre-industrial, Holocene versus Last glacial Maximum) and type (surface snow, firn, or ice) of investigated samples, the deployed method, and the applied contamination control. Finally, the OC (DOC or TOC) levels of Antarctic, Greenland, and Alpine ice cores are compared and discussed with respect to natural (biomass burning, vegetation emissions) and anthropogenic sources (fossil fuel combustion) contributing to atmospheric OC aerosol.http://www.clim-past.net/9/2195/2013/cp-9-2195-2013.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. Legrand
S. Preunkert
B. Jourdain
J. Guilhermet
X. Fa{ï}n
I. Alekhina
J. R. Petit
spellingShingle M. Legrand
S. Preunkert
B. Jourdain
J. Guilhermet
X. Fa{ï}n
I. Alekhina
J. R. Petit
Water-soluble organic carbon in snow and ice deposited at Alpine, Greenland, and Antarctic sites: a critical review of available data and their atmospheric relevance
Climate of the Past
author_facet M. Legrand
S. Preunkert
B. Jourdain
J. Guilhermet
X. Fa{ï}n
I. Alekhina
J. R. Petit
author_sort M. Legrand
title Water-soluble organic carbon in snow and ice deposited at Alpine, Greenland, and Antarctic sites: a critical review of available data and their atmospheric relevance
title_short Water-soluble organic carbon in snow and ice deposited at Alpine, Greenland, and Antarctic sites: a critical review of available data and their atmospheric relevance
title_full Water-soluble organic carbon in snow and ice deposited at Alpine, Greenland, and Antarctic sites: a critical review of available data and their atmospheric relevance
title_fullStr Water-soluble organic carbon in snow and ice deposited at Alpine, Greenland, and Antarctic sites: a critical review of available data and their atmospheric relevance
title_full_unstemmed Water-soluble organic carbon in snow and ice deposited at Alpine, Greenland, and Antarctic sites: a critical review of available data and their atmospheric relevance
title_sort water-soluble organic carbon in snow and ice deposited at alpine, greenland, and antarctic sites: a critical review of available data and their atmospheric relevance
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Climate of the Past
issn 1814-9324
1814-9332
publishDate 2013-09-01
description While it is now recognized that organic matter dominates the present-day atmospheric aerosol load over continents, its sources remain poorly known. The studies of organic species or organic fractions trapped in ice cores may help to overcome this lack of knowledge. Available data on the dissolved (or total) organic carbon (DOC or TOC) content of snow and ice often appear largely inconsistent, and, until now, no critical review has been conducted to understand the causes of these inconsistencies. To draw a more consistent picture of the organic carbon amount present in solid precipitation that accumulates on cold glaciers, we here review available data and, when needed, complete the data set with analyses of selected samples. The different data sets are then discussed by considering the age (modern versus pre-industrial, Holocene versus Last glacial Maximum) and type (surface snow, firn, or ice) of investigated samples, the deployed method, and the applied contamination control. Finally, the OC (DOC or TOC) levels of Antarctic, Greenland, and Alpine ice cores are compared and discussed with respect to natural (biomass burning, vegetation emissions) and anthropogenic sources (fossil fuel combustion) contributing to atmospheric OC aerosol.
url http://www.clim-past.net/9/2195/2013/cp-9-2195-2013.pdf
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