Molecular diffusion of stable water isotopes in polar firn as a proxy for past temperatures
Christian T. Holme, Vasileios Gkinis, Bo M. Vinther

TL;DR
This study evaluates six methods for reconstructing past temperatures from water isotope diffusion signals in polar ice cores, finding that using single isotope diffusion lengths yields the most accurate and precise results.
Contribution
It compares and benchmarks multiple diffusion-based temperature reconstruction methods using synthetic and real ice core data, highlighting the superior performance of single isotope diffusion length techniques.
Findings
Single isotope diffusion lengths provide the most precise temperature reconstructions (~1.0°C).
Reconstructed temperatures have a root-mean-square deviation of 0.7°C in benchmark tests.
Differential diffusion signals can be used for multiple temperature reconstruction techniques.
Abstract
Polar precipitation archived in ice caps contains information on past temperature conditions. Such information can be retrieved by measuring the water isotopic signals of and in ice cores. These signals have been attenuated during densification due to molecular diffusion in the firn column, where the magnitude of the diffusion is isotopologoue specific and temperature dependent. By utilizing the differential diffusion signal, dual isotope measurements of and enable multiple temperature reconstruction techniques. This study assesses how well six different methods can be used to reconstruct past surface temperatures from the diffusion-based temperature proxies. Two of the methods are based on the single diffusion lengths of and , three of the methods employ…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCryospheric studies and observations · Climate change and permafrost · Geology and Paleoclimatology Research
