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Titel |
Photolysis imprint in the nitrate stable isotope signal in snow and atmosphere of East Antarctica and implications for reactive nitrogen cycling |
VerfasserIn |
M. M. Frey, J. Savarino, S. Morin, J. Erbland, J. M. F. Martins |
Medientyp |
Artikel
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Sprache |
Englisch
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ISSN |
1680-7316
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Digitales Dokument |
URL |
Erschienen |
In: Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics ; 9, no. 22 ; Nr. 9, no. 22 (2009-11-16), S.8681-8696 |
Datensatznummer |
250007751
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Publikation (Nr.) |
copernicus.org/acp-9-8681-2009.pdf |
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Zusammenfassung |
The nitrogen (δ15N) and triple oxygen (δ17O and
δ18O) isotopic composition of nitrate (NO3−) was measured
year-round in the atmosphere and snow pits at Dome C, Antarctica
(DC, 75.1° S, 123.3° E), and in surface snow on a transect
between DC and the coast. Comparison to the isotopic signal in atmospheric
NO3− shows that snow NO3− is significantly enriched in
δ15N by >200‰ and depleted in δ18O by
<40‰. Post-depositional fractionation in Δ17O(NO3−)
is small, potentially allowing reconstruction of past shifts in tropospheric oxidation
pathways from ice cores. Assuming a Rayleigh-type process we find fractionation
constants ε of −60±15‰, 8±2‰ and
1±1‰, for δ15N, δ18O and Δ17O,
respectively. A photolysis model yields an upper limit for the photolytic
fractionation constant 15ε of δ15N, consistent
with lab and field measurements, and demonstrates a high sensitivity of
15ε to the incident actinic flux spectrum. The photolytic
15ε is process-specific and therefore applies to any snow
covered location. Previously published 15ε values are
not representative for conditions at the Earth surface, but apply only to the
UV lamp used in the reported experiment (Blunier et al., 2005; Jacobi et al., 2006).
Depletion of oxygen stable isotopes is attributed to photolysis followed by
isotopic exchange with water and hydroxyl radicals. Conversely, 15N
enrichment of the NO3− fraction in the snow implies 15N depletion
of emissions. Indeed, δ15N in atmospheric NO3− shows a strong
decrease from background levels (4±7‰) to −35‰
in spring followed by recovery during summer, consistent with
significant snowpack emissions of reactive nitrogen. Field and
lab evidence therefore suggest that photolysis is an important process
driving fractionation and associated NO3− loss from snow.
The Δ17O signature confirms previous coastal measurements that
the peak of atmospheric NO3− in spring is of stratospheric origin.
After sunrise photolysis drives then redistribution of NO3− from the
snowpack photic zone to the atmosphere and a snow surface skin layer,
thereby concentrating NO3− at the surface. Little NO3− appears to
be exported off the EAIS plateau, still snow emissions from as far as 600 km
inland can contribute to the coastal NO3− budget. |
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