Aromatic acids in a Eurasian Arctic ice core: a 2600-year proxy record of biomass burning
Autor: | Thomas Opel, Michael Sigl, Eric S. Saltzman, Murat Aydin, Diedrich Fritzsche, Mackenzie M. Grieman, Joseph R. McConnell |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
Stratigraphy lcsh:Environmental protection 010501 environmental sciences Atmospheric sciences 01 natural sciences Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience Carbon cycle Ice core lcsh:Environmental pollution East Asian Monsoon lcsh:TD169-171.8 Holocene lcsh:Environmental sciences 0105 earth and related environmental sciences lcsh:GE1-350 Global and Planetary Change geography Aromatic acid geography.geographical_feature_category Northern Hemisphere Paleontology 15. Life on land Arctic ice pack Climate Action Arctic 13. Climate action Climatology lcsh:TD172-193.5 Environmental science |
Zdroj: | EPIC3Climate of the Past, COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH, 13, pp. 395-410, ISSN: 1814-9324 Climate of the Past, vol 13, iss 4 Grieman, MM; Aydin, M; Fritzsche, D; McConnell, JR; Opel, T; Sigl, M; et al.(2017). Aromatic acids in a Eurasian Arctic ice core: a 2600-year proxy record of biomass burning. CLIMATE OF THE PAST, 13(4), 395-410. doi: 10.5194/cp-13-395-2017. UC Irvine: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/5t28p1q5 Climate of the Past, Vol 13, Iss 4, Pp 395-410 (2017) |
ISSN: | 1814-9324 1814-9332 |
Popis: | Wildfires and their emissions have significant impacts on ecosystems, climate, atmospheric chemistry, and carbon cycling. Well-dated proxy records are needed to study the long-term climatic controls on biomass burning and the associated climate feedbacks. There is a particular lack of information about long-term biomass burning variations in Siberia, the largest forested area in the Northern Hemisphere. In this study we report analyses of aromatic acids (vanillic and para-hydroxybenzoic acids) over the past 2600 years in the Eurasian Arctic Akademii Nauk ice core. These compounds are aerosol-borne, semi-volatile organic compounds derived from lignin combustion. The analyses were made using ion chromatography with electrospray mass spectrometric detection. The levels of these aromatic acids ranged from below the detection limit (0.01 to 0.05 ppb; 1 ppb = 1000 ng L−1) to about 1 ppb, with roughly 30 % of the samples above the detection limit. In the preindustrial late Holocene, highly elevated aromatic acid levels are observed during three distinct periods (650–300 BCE, 340–660 CE, and 1460–1660 CE). The timing of the two most recent periods coincides with the episodic pulsing of ice-rafted debris in the North Atlantic known as Bond events and a weakened Asian monsoon, suggesting a link between fires and large-scale climate variability on millennial timescales. Aromatic acid levels also are elevated during the onset of the industrial period from 1780 to 1860 CE, but with a different ratio of vanillic and para-hydroxybenzoic acid than is observed during the preindustrial period. This study provides the first millennial-scale record of aromatic acids. This study clearly demonstrates that coherent aromatic acid signals are recorded in polar ice cores that can be used as proxies for past trends in biomass burning. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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