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      Stratigraphic Noise in Time Series Derived from Ice Cores

      , ,
      Annals of Glaciology
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          Because of snow drifting, two time series of any variable derived from two adjacent ice cores will differ considerably. The size and statistical nature of this noise element is discussed for two kinds of measured substance. A theory is developed and compared to data from Greenland and Canadian Arctic ice cores. In case 1, the measured substance can diffuse and the seasonal cycle degrade with time and depth, e.g. δ(18O). In case 2, the measured substance cannot diffuse, e.g. microparticles. The case 2 time series contain drift noise proportional to that in the accumulation series. For accumulation series, the spectral power is concentrated at the high frequencies, i.e. is “blue”. Such noise can be easily reduced by taking relatively short time averages. The noise in the case 1 time series, however, starts out “blue” but quickly diffuses to have a “red” character with significant power at longer wavelengths, and many decades of such series must be averaged to reduce the noise level. Because the seasonal amplitude of any given variable is an important input to the drift noise and because the seasonal amplitudes of some variable types are latitude-dependent, some sites have inherently less drift noise than others.

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          Most cited references4

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          Stable isotopes in precipitation

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            Past volcanism revealed by Greenland Ice Sheet impurities

            C. Hammer (1977)
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              Dating of Greenland Ice Cores by Flow Models, Isotopes, Volcanic Debris, and Continental Dust

              The available methods for dating of ice cores are based on radioactive decay, ice-flow calculations, or stratigraphic observations. The two former categories are broadly outlined, and special emphasis is given to stratigraphic methods. Reference horizons are established back to A.D. 1783, in the form of elevated electrical conductivities due to fallout of soluble volcanic debris. Seasonal variations in the concentrations of insoluble microparticles and/or stable isotopes are measured over the entire 400 m lengths of three ice cores, recovered by Greenland Ice Sheet Program (GISP). The resulting absolute time scales are probably accurate within a few years per thousand. Techniques are outlined for re-establishing the approximate, original shape of heavy-isotope profiles that have been more or less smoothed by diffusion in firn and ice. Annual-layer thickness measurements on 24 increments down to 1130 m depth in the Camp Century ice core determine a flow pattern, consistent with that suggested by Dansgaard and Johnsen (1969), and a Camp Century time scale with an estimated uncertainty better than 3% back to 10000 years B.P.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                applab
                Annals of Glaciology
                A. Glaciology.
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                0260-3055
                1727-5644
                1985
                January 2017
                : 7
                :
                : 76-83
                Article
                10.1017/S0260305500005942
                89a864a3-2f6b-4f41-9ca8-c68dc6d7f5d3
                © 1985
                History

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