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Temporal variability of Cd, Pb, and Pb, isotope deposition in central Greenland snow

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Title Temporal variability of Cd, Pb, and Pb, isotope deposition in central Greenland snow
Names Sherrell, R. M. (creator)
Boyle, E. A. (creator)
Harris, N. R. (creator)
Falkner, Kelly (creator)
Date Issued 2000-05-30 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract We present a decade-long (1981–1990) high-resolution (subseasonal) record of Pb and Cd
concentrations and Pb isotopic composition in a series of 119 snow samples from a 6-m snow pit at
Summit, Greenland. Both metals show order of magnitude seasonal variability, with maxima in spring of
every year, coinciding with sulfate peaks. These short-term features complicate attempts to quantify secular
decadal-scale trends associated with anthropogenic source changes (e.g., phasing out of leaded gasoline).
A small (<50%) decrease during the decade is estimated for Pb, but no significant trend is observed for Cd.
Mean concentrations for the snow pit (Pb = 216, Cd = 11 pmol kg¯¹) are indistinguishable from mean
values for nearly continuous samples of the 1–6 m section of a firn core drilled 1 km away, suggesting
freedom from contamination artifact. An evaluation of potential sources confirms that Pb and Cd are
dominated by anthropogenic inputs. Isotopic ratios (²⁰⁶Pb/²⁰⁷Pb and ²⁰⁸Pb/²⁰⁷Pb) determined on a subset
of snow pit samples of varying ages within the decade indicate that springtime Pb concentration maxima
are consistent with a mixture of eastern European, former Soviet Union, and western European sources,
while seasonal Pb minima, especially from the early portion of the decade, plot along a different mixing
line, suggesting a mixture of U.S. and European sources. The combination of Pb concentration and isotopic
composition are consistent with an estimated decrease in U.S. Pb contributions of about twofold over the
decade, which predicts a decadal concentration decrease in the snow of ~30%. However, the secular trends
in both concentration and isotopes are barely detectable against seasonal and interannual variability. The
evidence for seasonally distinct source regions may be useful for interpretation of high-resolution records
of other chemical species in Greenland snow and ice. Analyses of two deep core sections dated at 1699–
1700 and 1780–1788, compared to the snow pit data, indicate that both Pb and Cd deposition in central
Greenland roughly doubled during the eighteenth century, then doubled again by the 1980s.
Genre Article
Topic trace metals
Identifier Sherrell, R. M., Boyle E. A., Falkner K. K. , and Harris, N. R., 2000, Temporal variability of Cd, Pb, and Pb isotope deposition in central Greenland snow: Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst., v. 1, On-line paper number 1999GC000007.

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