- Epifanio, Jenna A;
- Brook, Edward J;
- Buizert, Christo;
- Edwards, Jon S;
- Sowers, Todd A;
- Kahle, Emma C;
- Severinghaus, Jeffrey P;
- Steig, Eric J;
- Winski, Dominic A;
- Osterberg, Erich C;
- Fudge, Tyler J;
- Aydin, Murat;
- Hood, Ekaterina;
- Kalk, Michael;
- Kreutz, Karl J;
- Ferris, David G;
- Kennedy, Joshua A
Abstract. A new ice core drilled at the South Pole provides a
54 000-year paleoenvironmental record including the composition of the past
atmosphere. This paper describes the SP19 chronology for the South Pole
atmospheric gas record and complements a previous paper (Winski et al., 2019)
describing the SP19 ice chronology. The gas chronology is based on a
discrete methane (CH4) record with 20- to 190-year resolution. To
construct the gas timescale, abrupt changes in atmospheric CH4 during
the glacial period and centennial CH4 variability during the Holocene
were used to synchronize the South Pole gas record with analogous data from
the West Antarctic Ice Sheet Divide ice core. Stratigraphic matching based
on visual optimization was verified using an automated matching algorithm.
The South Pole ice core recovers all expected changes in CH4 based on
previous records. Gas transport in the firn results in smoothing of the
atmospheric gas record with a smoothing function spectral width that ranges
from 30 to 78 years, equal to 3 % of the gas-age–ice-age difference, or
Δage. The new gas chronology, in combination with the existing ice
age scale from Winski et al. (2019), allows a model-independent
reconstruction of the gas-age–ice-age difference through the whole record,
which will be useful for testing firn densification models.