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Ice Cores from the St. Elias Mountains, Yukon, Canada: Their Significance for Climate, Atmospheric Composition and Volcanism in the North Pacific Region

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Title Ice Cores from the St. Elias Mountains, Yukon, Canada: Their Significance for Climate, Atmospheric Composition and Volcanism in the North Pacific Region
Names Zdanowicz, Christian (creator)
Fisher, David (creator)
Bourgeois, Jocelyne (creator)
Yalcin, Kaplan (creator)
et al. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-01-17 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the Arctic Institute of North America and can be found at: http://arctic.journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/arctic/index.php/arctic/index.
Abstract A major achievement in research supported by the Kluane Lake Research Station was the recovery, in 2001–02,
of a suite of cores from the icefields of the central St. Elias Mountains, Yukon, by teams of researchers from Canada, the
United States, and Japan. This project led to the development of parallel, long (10³–10⁴ year) ice-core records of climate
and atmospheric change over an altitudinal range of more than 2 km, from the Eclipse Icefield (3017 m) to the ice-covered
plateau of Mt. Logan (5340 m). These efforts built on earlier work recovering single ice cores in this region. Comparison of
these records has allowed for variations in climate and atmospheric composition to be linked with changes in the vertical
structure and dynamics of the North Pacific atmosphere, providing a unique perspective on these changes over the Holocene.
Owing to their privileged location, cores from the St. Elias Icefields also contain a remarkably detailed record of aerosols
from various sources around or across the North Pacific. In this paper we review major scientific findings from the study of St.
Elias Mountain ice cores, focusing on five main themes: (1) The record of stable water isotopes (δ¹⁸O, δD), which has unique
characteristics that differ from those of Greenland, other Arctic ice cores, and even among sites in the St. Elias; (2) the snow
accumulation history; (3) the record of pollen, biomass burning aerosol, and desert dust deposition; (4) the record of long-range
air pollutant deposition (sulphate and lead); and (5) the record of paleo-volcanism. Our discussion draws on studies published
since 2000, but based on older ice cores from the St. Elias Mountains obtained in 1980 and 1996.
Genre Article
Topic Climate change
Identifier Zdanowicz, C., Fisher, D., Bourgeois, J., Demuth, M., Zheng, J., Mayewski, P., ... & Goto-Azuma, K. (2014). Ice Cores from the St. Elias Mountains, Yukon, Canada: Their Significance for Climate, Atmospheric Composition and Volcanism in the North Pacific Region. Arctic, 67, 35-57. doi:10.14430/arctic4352

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