Dating the Vostok ice core by an inverse method
- 16 December 2001
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
- Vol. 106 (D23) , 31837-31851
- https://doi.org/10.1029/2001jd900245
Abstract
Using the chronological information available in the Vostok records, we apply an inverse method to assess the quality of the Vostok glaciological timescale. The inversion procedure provides not only an optimized glaciological timescale and its confidence interval but also a reliable estimate of the duration of successive events. Our results highlight a disagreement between orbitally tuned and glaciological timescales below ∼2700 m (i.e., ∼250 kyr B.P., thousands of years before present). This disagreement could be caused by some discontinuity in the spatial variation of accumulation upstream of Vostok. Moreover, the stratigraphic datings of central Greenland ice cores (GRIP and GISP2) appear older than our optimized timescale for the late glacial. This underlines an unconsistency between the physical assumptions used to construct the Vostok glaciological timescale and the stratigraphic datings. The inverse method allows the first assessment of the evolution of the phase between Vostok climatic records and insolation. This phase significantly varies with time which gives a measure of the nonlinear character of the climatic system and suggests that the climatic response to orbital forcing is of different nature for glacial and interglacial periods. We confirm that the last interglacial, as recorded in the Vostok deuterium record, was long (16.2±2 kyr, thousands of years). However, midtransition of termination II occurred at 133.4±2.5 kyr BP, which does not support the recent claim for an earlier deglaciation. Finally, our study suggests that temperature changes are correctly estimated when using the spatial present‐day deuterium‐temperature relationship to interpret the Vostok deuterium record.Keywords
This publication has 54 references indexed in Scilit:
- Estimation of temperature change and of gas age‐ice age difference, 108 kyr B.P., at Vostok, AntarcticaJournal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 2001
- A 420,000 year deuterium excess record from East Antarctica: Information on past changes in the origin of precipitation at VostokJournal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 2001
- A tentative chronology for the EPICA Dome Concordia Ice CoreGeophysical Research Letters, 2001
- Validity of the isotopic thermometer in central Antarctica: Limited impact of glacial precipitation seasonality and moisture originGeophysical Research Letters, 2000
- Visual‐stratigraphic dating of the GISP2 ice core: Basis, reproducibility, and applicationJournal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 1997
- Modeling the signal transfer of sea water δ18O to the δ18O of atmospheric oxygen using a diagnostic box model for the terrestrial and marine biosphereJournal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 1997
- GCM analysis of local influences on ice core δ signalsGeophysical Research Letters, 1997
- Organic carbon paleo‐pCO2 and marine‐ice core correlations and chronologyGeophysical Research Letters, 1996
- The Dole Effect and its variations during the last 130,000 years as measured in the Vostok Ice CoreGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 1994
- A 135,000‐year Vostok‐Specmap Common temporal frameworkPaleoceanography and Paleoclimatology, 1993