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Changes in Black Carbon Deposition to Antarctica from Two Ice Core Records, A.D. 1850-2000Continuous flow analysis was based on a steady sample flow and in-line detection of BC and other chemical substances as described in McConnell et al. (2007). In the cold room, previously cut one meter ice core sticks of 3x3cm, are melted continuously on a heated melter head specifically designed to eliminate contamination from the atmosphere or by the external parts of the ice. The melted ice from the most inner part of the ice stick is continuously pumped by a peristaltic pump and carried to a clean lab by Teflon lines. The recorded signal is continuous, integrating a sample volume of about 0.05 mL, for which the temporal resolution depends on the speed of melting, ice density and snow accumulation rate at the ice core drilling site. For annual accumulation derived from the WAIS and Law Dome ice cores, we assumed ~3.1 cm water equivalent uncertainty in each year's accumulation from short scale spatial variability (glaciological noise) which was determined from several measurements of annual accumulation in multiple parallel ice cores notably from the WAIS Divide ice core site (Banta et al., 2008) and from South Pole site (McConnell et al., 1997; McConnell et al., 2000). Refractory black carbon (rBC) concentrations were determined using the same method as in (Bisiaux et al., 2011) and adapted to continuous flow measurements as described by (McConnell et al., 2007). The technique uses a single particle intracavity laser induced incandescence photometer (SP2, Droplet Measurement Technologies, Boulder, Colorado) coupled to an ultrasonic nebulizer/desolvation (CETAC UT5000) Flow Injection Analysis (FIA). All analyses, sample preparation etc, were performed in a class 100 cleanroom using anti contamination "clean techniques". The samples were not acidified.
Document ID
20120010622
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Preprint (Draft being sent to journal)
Authors
Bisiaux, Marion M.
(Desert Research Inst. Reno, NV, United States)
Edward, Ross
(Curtin Univ. of Technology Bentley, Australia)
McConnell, Joseph R.
(Desert Research Inst. Reno, NV, United States)
Curran, Mark A. J.
(Tasmania Univ. Hobart, Australia)
VanOmmen, Tas D.
(Tasmania Univ. Hobart, Australia)
Smith, Andrew M.
(Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation Lucas Heights, Australia)
Neumann, Thomas A.
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD, United States)
Pasteris, Daniel R.
(Desert Research Inst. Reno, NV, United States)
Penner, Joyce E.
(Michigan Univ. Ann Arbor, MI, United States)
Taylor, Kendrick
(Desert Research Inst. Reno, NV, United States)
Date Acquired
August 26, 2013
Publication Date
May 9, 2012
Subject Category
Geophysics
Report/Patent Number
GSFC.JA.00429.2012
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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