Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 2400
Citation Neff, P., Steig, E., Clark, D., McConnell, J., Pettit, E., and Menounos, B., 2012. An ice-core record of net snow accumulation and seasonal snow chemistry at a temperate-glacier site: Mount Waddington, southwest British Columbia, Canada. Journal of Glaciology, 58, 12:1165-1175. doi: 10.3189/2012JoG12J078
Organization University of Washington; Western Washington University; Desert Research Institute; University of Alaska FairbanksUniversity of Northern British Columbia
URL http://couplet2.unbc.ca/pdfs/Neff_etal_2012.pdf
Abstract/Description or Keywords A 141m ice core was recovered from Combatant Col (51.3858 N, 125.2588 W; 3000ma.s.l.), Mount Waddington, Coast Mountains, British Columbia, Canada. Records of black carbon, dust, lead and water stable isotopes demonstrate that unambiguous seasonality is preserved throughout the core, despite summer surface snowmelt and temperate ice. High accumulation rates at the site (>4m ice eq. a–1) limit modification of annual stratigraphy by percolation of surface meltwater. The ice-core record spans the period 1973–2010. An annually averaged time series of lead concentrations from the core correlates well with historical records of lead emission from North America, and with ice-core records of lead from the Greenland ice sheet. The depth–age scale for the ice core provides sufficient constraint on the vertical strain to allow estimation of the age of the ice at bedrock. Total ice thickness at Combatant Col is 250 m; an ice core to bedrock would likely contain ice in excess of 200 years in age. Accumulation at Combatant Col is significantly correlated with both regional precipitation and large-scale geopotential height anomalies.
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