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The Co2 Record in Ice Cores: A Reconstruction of the Atmospheric Evolution Between 18 ka BP and 1850 AD (Abstract)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

D. Raynaud
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Glaciologie et de Géophysique, 2 rue Très-Cloitres, 38031 Grenoble Cedex, France
J. M. Barnola
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de Glaciologie et de Géophysique, 2 rue Très-Cloitres, 38031 Grenoble Cedex, France
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Abstract

Type
Abstract
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1984

Air bubbles trapped in glacial ice at the time of its formation provide a unique record of variations in past worldwide atmospheric CO2 content. Published records, covering approximately the last 30 to 40 ka, indicate a minimum in the CO2 concentrations during the latter part of the last ice age, around 18 ka BP, with values of the order of 200 ppmv (see, in particular, Reference Delmas, Ascencio and LegrandDelmas and others 1980, Reference Neftel, Oeschger, Schwander, Stauffer and ZumbrunnNeftel and others 1982). The ice records indicate also that during approximately the last 2 ka, before any significant anthropogenic influence on the atmospheric CO2 content, the concentrations were of the order of 260 to 270 ppmv (Reference Neftel, Oeschger, Schwander, Stauffer and ZumbrunnNeftel and others 1982, Reference Barnola, Raynaud, Neftel and OeschgerBarnola and others 1983). By comparison the. present mean annual concentration in the atmosphere is about 340 ppmv.

We present new results obtained on the Dome C and D 57 cores taken in East Antarctica, which will be published in detail elsewhere. The D 57 results indicate that before 1850 AD the CO2 concentration was as low as 258 ppmv, with a significant fluctuation between 258 and 272 ppmv in the interval between approximately 1500 and 1850 AD. The D 57 record also indicates the initiation of a marked increase in the CO2 concentration near the second part of the last century and the first part of the present one. The new Dome C results provide a detailed CO2 record for the last 25 ka which is in general agreement with the previously published Dome C record (Reference Delmas, Ascencio and LegrandDelmas and others 1980). This new record confirms, in particular, the occurrence of a low CO2 level of the order of 200 ppmv during the last glacial maximum, around 18 ka BP. It indicates, also, that (1) the increase in CO2 concentration associated with the end of the last ice age began before or simultaneously with the important climatic change indicated by the large shift observed in the isotopic composition of the ice, (2) this CO2 increase may have occurred in two steps, and (3) there is a large scatter in the CO2 concentration near the end of the ice age-Holocene transition, with most of the values as high as about the present-day atmospheric concentration of 340 ppmv.

Our new results permit the following preliminary conclusions to be made. (i). The atmospheric CO2 level during pre-industrial times may have been as low as about 260 ppmv, in contrast with the value of 290 ppmv which has been frequently quoted (see, for instance, World Meteorological Organization in press). This particularly low level strongly suggests that there was an important biospheric source of CO2 induced by mankind before the use of fossil fuel. This should be taken into account when modelling the evolution of atmospheric CO2 and the corresponding climatic change for the time period during which anthropogenic CO2 sources are important. In addition, natural fluctuations of the order of 10 ppmv or more may have occurred during the few centuries before 1800–1850 AD, which may reflect changes in the biospheric and oceanic CO2 reservoirs, (ii). The low atmospheric CO2 concentration (about 200 ppmv) inferred for the last glacial maximum should be taken into account when modelling the climatic conditions for 18 ka BP. (iii). The interpretation of the comparative timing between CO2 and climate changes at the end of the ice age could be complicated because of the discontinuous nature of the corresponding CO2 increase.

References

Barnola, J M, Raynaud, D, Neftel, A, Oeschger, H 1983 Comparison of CO2 measurements by two laboratories on air from bubbles in polar ice. Nature 303(5916): 410413.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delmas, R J, Ascencio, J-M, Legrand, M 1980 Polar ice evidence that atmospheric CO2 20,000 yr BP was 50% of present. Nature 284(5752): 155157 Google Scholar
Neftel, A, Oeschger, H, Schwander, J, Stauffer, B, Zumbrunn, R 1982 Ice core sample measurements give atmospheric CO2 content during the past 40,000 yr. Nature 295(5846): 220223 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
World Meteorological Organization In press WMO project on research and monitoring of atmospheric CO2 . In Report of the WMO Commission for Atmospheric Sciences (CAS) meeting of experte on the CO2 concentrations from pre-industrial times to the IGY, held at NOAA’s Enviromental Research Laboratories, Boulder, Colorado, S2–25 June 1S83 (Report 10)Google Scholar