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Sulphate-climate coupling over the past 300,000 years in inland Antarctica

Authors :
Iizuka, Yoshinori
Uemura, Ryu
Motoyama, Hideaki
Suzuki, Toshitaka
Miyake, Takayuki
Hirabayashi, Motohiro
Hondoh, Takeo
Source :
Nature. October 4, 2012, Vol. 490 Issue 7418, p81, 4 p.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

The climate of the past 430 kyr is guided by large-amplitude 100-kyr glacial-interglacial cycles (5). Such cycles are triggered by the Earth's orbital changes and then amplified by various land-atmosphere [...]<br />Sulphate aerosols, particularly micrometre-sized particles of sulphate salt and sulphate-adhered dust, can act as cloud condensation nuclei, leading to increased solar scattering that cools Earth's climate (1,2). Evidence for such a coupling may lie in the sulphate record from polar ice cores, but previous analyses of melted ice-core samples have provided only sulphate ion concentrations, which may be due to sulphuric acid (3). Here we present profiles of sulphate salt and sulphate-adhered dust fluxes over the past 300,000 years from the Dome Fuji ice core in inland Antarctica. Our results show a nearly constant flux of sulphate-adhered dust through glacial and interglacial periods despite the large increases in total dust flux during glacial maxima (4). The sulphate salt flux, however, correlates inversely with temperature, suggesting a climatic coupling between particulate sulphur and temperature. For example, the total sulphate salt flux during the Last Glacial Maximum averages 5.78 mg [m.sup.-2] [yr.sup.-1], which is almost twice the Holocene value. Although it is based on a modern analogue with considerable uncertainties when applied to the ice-core record, this analysis indicates that the glacial-to-interglacial decrease in sulphate would lessen the aerosol indirect effects on cloud lifetime and albedo, leading to an Antarctic warming of 0.1 to 5 kelvin.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
490
Issue :
7418
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.304726256
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature11359