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A one-dimensional temperature and age modeling study for selecting the drill site of the oldest ice core near Dome Fuji, Antarctica

Authors :
T. Obase
A. Abe-Ouchi
F. Saito
S. Tsutaki
S. Fujita
K. Kawamura
H. Motoyama
Source :
The Cryosphere, Vol 17, Pp 2543-2562 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Copernicus Publications, 2023.

Abstract

The recovery of a new Antarctic ice core spanning the past ∼ 1.5 million years will advance our understanding of climate system dynamics during the Quaternary. Recently, glaciological field surveys have been conducted to select the most suitable core location near Dome Fuji (DF), Antarctica. Specifically, ground-based radar-echo soundings have been used to acquire highly detailed images of bedrock topography and internal ice layers. In this study, we use a one-dimensional (1-D) ice-flow model to compute the temporal evolutions of age and temperature, in which the ice flow is linked with not only transient climate forcing associated with past glacial–interglacial cycles but also transient basal melting diagnosed along the evolving temperature profile. We investigated the influence of ice thickness, accumulation rate, and geothermal heat flux on the age and temperature profiles. The model was constrained by the observed temperature and age profiles reconstructed from the DF ice-core analysis. The results of sensitivity experiments indicate that ice thickness is the most crucial parameter influencing the computed age of the ice because it is critical to the history of basal temperature and basal melting, which can eliminate old ice. The 1-D model was applied to a 54 km long transect in the vicinity of DF and compared with radargram data. We found that the basal age of the ice is mostly controlled by the local ice thickness, demonstrating the importance of high-spatial-resolution surveys of bedrock topography for selecting ice-core drilling sites.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19940416 and 19940424
Volume :
17
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Cryosphere
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4a4db3a69ddb4bc6968b4899fb26301b
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-17-2543-2023