Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.

Snow chemistry across Antarctica

TitoloSnow chemistry across Antarctica
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2005
AutoriBertler, N., Mayewski P.A., Aristarain A., Barrett P., Becagli S., Bernardo R., Bo S., Xiao C., Curran M., Qin D., Dixon D.A., Ferron F., Fischer H., Frey M., Frezzotti M, Fundel F., Genthon C., Gragnani R., Hamilton G.S., Handley M., Hong S., Isaksson E., Kang J., Ren J., Kamiyama K., Kanamori S., Kärkäs E., Karlöf L., Kaspari S., Kreutz K., Kurbatov A., Meyerson E., Ming Y., Zhang M., Motoyama H., Mulvaney R., Oerter H., Osterberg E., Proposito Marco, Pyne A., Ruth U., Simões J., Smith B., Sneed S., Teinilä K., Traufetter F., Udisti R., Virkkula A., Watanabe O., Williamson B., Winther J.-G., Li Y., Wolff E., Li Z., and Zielinski A.
RivistaAnnals of Glaciology
Volume41
Paginazione167-179
ISSN02603055
Parole chiaveantarctica, chemical oceanography, marine snow, sulfate
Abstract

An updated compilation of published and new data of major-ion (Ca, Cl, K, Mg, Na, NO3, SO4) and methylsulfonate (MS) concentrations in snow from 520 Antarctic sites is provided by the national ITASE (International Trans-Antarctic Scientific Expedition) programmes of Australia, Brazil, China, Germany, Italy, Japan, Korea, New Zealand, Norway, the United Kingdom, the United States and the national Antarctic pogramme of Finland. The comparison shows that snow chemistry concentrations vary by up to four orders of magnitude across Antarctica and exhibit distinct geographical patterns. The Antarctic-wide comparison of glaciochemical records provides a unique opportunity to improve our understanding of the fundamental factors that ultimately control the chemistry of snow or ice samples. This paper aims to initiate data compilation and administration in order to provide a framework for facilitation of Antarctic-wide snow chemistry discussions across all ITASE nations and other contributing groups. The data are made available through the ITASE web page (http://www2.umaine.edu/itase/ content/syngroups/snowchem.html) and will be updated with new data as they are provided. In addition, recommendations for future research efforts are summarized.

Note

cited By 41

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-33646338204&doi=10.3189%2f172756405781813320&partnerID=40&md5=3a314f39caad39d047edfdda328d69cd
DOI10.3189/172756405781813320
Citation KeyBertler2005167