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Sea ice as a source of sea salt aerosol to Greenland ice cores: a model-based study

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Abstract

jats:pAbstract. Growing evidence suggests that the sea ice surface is an important source of sea salt aerosol and this has significant implications for polar climate and atmospheric chemistry. It also offers the opportunity to use ice core sea salt records as proxies for past sea ice extent. To explore this possibility in the Arctic region, we use a chemical transport model to track the emission, transport and deposition of sea salt from both the open ocean and the sea ice, allowing us to assess the relative importance of each. Our results confirm the importance of sea ice sea salt (SISS) to the winter Arctic aerosol burden. For the first time, we explicitly simulate the sea salt concentrations of Greenland snow and find they match high resolution Greenland ice core records to within a factor of two. Our simulations suggest that SISS contributes to the winter maxima in sea salt characteristic of ice cores across Greenland. A north-south gradient in the contribution of SISS relative to open ocean sea salt (OOSS) exists across Greenland, with 50 % of sea salt being SISS at northern sites such as NEEM, while only 10 % of sea salt is SISS at southern locations such as ACT10C. Our model shows some skill at reproducing the inter-annual variability in sea salt concentrations for 1991–1999 AD, particularly at Summit where up to 62 % of the variability is explained. Future work will involve constraining what is driving this inter-annual variability and operating the model under different paleoclimatic conditions. </jats:p>

Description

Keywords

3708 Oceanography, 3709 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience, 37 Earth Sciences, 3701 Atmospheric Sciences, 3705 Geology, 13 Climate Action

Journal Title

Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1680-7316

Volume Title

Publisher

Copernicus Publications
Sponsorship
Royal Society (RP120096)
European Commission Horizon 2020 (H2020) Marie Sk?odowska-Curie actions (658120)
This work was supported by a European Commission Horizon 2020 Marie Sklodowska-Curie Individual Fellowship (no. 658120, SEADOG) to Rachael H. Rhodes. Eric W. Wolff is supported by a Royal Society Professorship.