Ice and sediment cores in paleoclimatology

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Ice and sediment cores in paleoclimatology Samuel Masoni Quentin Impagliazzo Luci-Lou Hebert

description

Support de présentation orale des méthodes de datation des carottes sédimentaires et lacustres en paléoclimatologie (L2 Sciences de la terre)

Transcript of Ice and sediment cores in paleoclimatology

  • Ice and sediment cores in paleoclimatology

    Samuel Masoni

    Quentin Impagliazzo

    Luci-Lou Hebert

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    INTRODUCTION

    INTRODUCTION

    Ice cores Sediment cores (from the lake or from the sea-floor)

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    Summary

    INTRODUCTION

    I- Ice Cores

    1) Introduction

    2) History of ice core research

    3) Techniques used in ice core research and dating

    strategies

    4) Measurements performed on the ice

    5) Dating Strategy

    6) A general overview of climates of the past as seen

    from ice cores and related proxies:

    7) What past climates are relevant to modern-day and

    future climate change?

    8) What more research is needed? (Four challenges)

    Summary

    II- Sediment Cores

    1) Lake Sediments

    A/ What can we learn thanks to lake sediment cores

    B/ Which methods are used to determine age within the core

    2) Seafloor Sediments

    A/ Drilling Techniques and Repartition

    B/ Cores Identification and Description

    C/ Sediment composition and geographic distribution

    D/ Cores Dating

    E/ Advantages and disadvantages of seafloor sediment cores

    CONCLUSION

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    I. Ice Cores

    I. Ice Cores

    1) Introduction https://www.youtube.com/embed/T69_diWYbkQ?rel=0

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    2) History of ice core research

    I. Ice Cores

    1960 : Ice core research started 1st core drilling at Camp Century in Greenland GRIP (European) and GIPS2 (US) project Antarctica (Vostok, Dome C) EPICA (European Project for Ice Coring in Antarctica)

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    3) Techniques used in ice core research and dating strategies

    I. Ice Cores

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    3) Techniques used in ice core research and dating strategies

    I. Ice Cores

    DIFFICULTIES: The access to the drilling site The extreme climatic conditions The need to use a drilling fluid to prevent the hole from closing The improvement of drilling techniques

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    4) Measurments performed on the ice

    I. Ice Cores

    Which Climate Properties Do We Have Access to ?

    Temperature

    Accumulation rate

    Origin of the precipitation

    Atmospheric composition

    Other climate parameters

    Volcanic and solar forcings

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    5) Dating Strategy

    I. Ice Cores

    1) Layer counting (only for Greenland, not for Antarctica)

    2) Glaciological modeling

    3) Use of time markers correlation

    4) Comparison with insolation changes (orbital tuning)

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    6) A general overview of climates of the past as seen from the ice cores and related proxies

    I. Ice Cores

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    I. Ice Cores

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    I. Ice Cores

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    I. Ice Cores

    7) What past climates are relevent to modern-day and future climate change ?

    Anthropogenic perturbation

    Greenhouse gas concentration never been so hight

    Projected climate change compare to past climate change

    Future climate change = abrupt events

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    I. Ice Cores

    8) What more research needed ? 4 Challenges

    1) The first Challenge : Obtain an undisturbed Antarctic ice core climate record prior to 1.2 million

    years ago

    2) The second Challenge : Obtain an undisturbed Greenland ice core climate record covering the

    integrity of the last interglacial periods

    3) The third Challenge : The full description of millennial scale variability

    4 ) The final Challenge : The ultra-high-resolution records of climate variability and climate

    forcings spanning the past 2000 years

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    II. Sediment Cores

    II. Sediment cores

    1) Lake sediments

    A/ What can we learn thanks to lake sediments cores ?

    Water level (the depth of flowing water).

    Lake drying

    Frost

    Oxygenation

    Exceptional events

    Living conditions for organisms in the lake

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    II. Sediment Cores

    B/ Which methods are used to determine age within the core ?

    Magnetic Reversal

    Tephrochronology

    Radiocarbon Analysis

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    II. Sediment Cores

    2) Seafloor Sediments

    A/ Drilling Techniques and Geographical Repartition

    Drilling techniques

    - Difficulty : keep the sediment compact

    - Different techniques for different kinds of sediments

    Expedition and price:

    - A common expedition

    - Drilling speed : 1 m/h

    - Drilling cost : 3500 $/m

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    II. Sediment Cores

    A/ Drilling Techniques and Geographical Repartition

    Geographical repartition :

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    II. Sediment Cores

    B/ Cores Identification and Description

    How to identify cores :

    - LEG : which expedition

    - SITE: where

    - HOLE : which hole

    - CORE: how deep

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    II. Sediment Cores

    B/ Cores Identification an Description

    How to describe cores:

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    II. Sediment Cores

    C/ Sediment composition and geographic distribution Type of sediments Origin of sediments Sediment Map

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    II. Sediment Cores

    D/ Cores Dating

    Biostratigraphy (microfossils)

    Magnetic Reversal

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    II. Sediment Cores

    E/ Advantages and disadvantages of seafloor sediment cores

    Advantages - Old enough to record the

    Cenozoic sediments

    - Can be dated

    - Large geographical repartition

    - Many types of information

    Disadvantages

    - High cost

    - Some discontinuity

    - Technical difficulties

    -Low resolution

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    CONCLUSION

    CONCLUSION

    Ice cores: - 123 000 (greenland) to 800 000 years (antartica) - Global geographic scale - High resolution Lake sediment cores: - 800 000 years - Local geographic scale - High resolution

    Seafloor sediment cores : - 100 millions years - Global geographic scale - Low resolution

    Reconstruct the past climates plan the futur climates

  • Bibliography

    BIBLIOGRAPHY

    Jouzel, J., & MassonDelmotte, V. (2010). Paleoclimates: what do we learn from deep ice cores?. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change, 1(5), 654-669.

    Menking, K. M. (1995). Paleoclimatic Reconstruction's from Owens Lake Core OL-92, Southeastern California (No. AFRL-SR-BL-TR-98-0026). Air force research lab bolling afb dc.

  • Worksheet correction

    Which Climate Properties Do We Have Access to ?: What are the 4 challenges in ice core research? : Which clue can give information about :

    Water level (the depth of flowing water) Lake drying Frost Oxygenation Exceptional events Find the correct number :

    Drilling speed : .. m/h Drilling cost : .... $/m

    Which information gives :

    LEG : SITE: HOLE : CORE: Examples of information listed in the table:

  • Will we survive ? In which conditions ?

    How do you imagine our future ?

  • Thank you for your attention