Methyl chloride and methyl bromide in Antarctic ice cores
<p>This award supports the analysis, in Antarctic ice cores, of the ozone depleting substances methyl bromide (CH3Br) and methyl chloride (CH3Cl), and the sulfur-containing gas, carbonyl sulfide (OCS). The broad scientific goal is to assess the level and variability of these gases in the preindustrial atmosphere. This information will allow testing of current models for sources and sinks of these gases from the atmosphere, and to indirectly assess the impact of anthropogenic activities on their biogeochemical cycles. Longer-term records will shed light on the climatic sensitivity of the atmospheric burden of these gases, and ultimately on the biogeochemical processes controlling them. These gases are present in ice at parts per trillion levels, and the current database consists entirely of a small number of measurements made in from a shallow ice core from Siple Dome, Antarctica. This project will involve studies of ice core samples from three Antarctic sites: Siple Station, Siple Dome, and South Pole. The sampling strategy is designed to accomplish several objectives: 1) to verify the atmospheric mixing ratios previously observed in shallow Siple Dome ice for OCS, CH3Br, and CH3Cl at sites with very different accumulation rates and surface temperatures; 2) to obtain a well-dated, high resolution record from a high accumulation rate site (Siple Station), that can provide overlap in mean gas age with Antarctic firn air samples; 3) explore Holocene variability in trace gas mixing ratios; and 4) to make the first measurements of these trace gases in Antarctic glacial ice. In terms of broader impact on society, this research will help to provide a stronger scientific basis for policy decisions regulating the production and use of ozone-depleting and climate-active gases. Specifically, the methyl bromide results will contribute to the current debate on the impact of recent regulation (via the Montreal Protocol and its Amendments) on atmospheric levels. Determination of pre-industrial atmospheric variability of ozone-depleting substances will help place more realistic constraints on scenarios used for future projections of stratospheric ozone and its climatic impacts. This research will involve the participation of both graduate and undergraduate students.</p>
Contact Info
Principal InvestigatorSaltzman, Eric
PI Email Program ManagerJulie Palais
CO-PIs- Murat Aydin
University of California-Irvine
Organization Address4199 Campus Dr Ste 300
CityIRVINE
StateCA
Zip92697
Phone9498244768
Information
Award Number338359
Award Amount to Date456927
NSF DirectorateOPP
NSF OrganizationANT
Award InstrumentContinuing grant
Programs- ANTARCTIC GLACIOLOGY
- 5116
- OTHR
- 1043
- 0000
- 0311000 Polar Programs-Related
2004-01-01T00:00:00Z
Last Amendment Date2004-08-04T00:00:00Z
Expiration Date2007-12-31T00:00:00Z