Sublimation origin of negative deuterium excess observed in snow and ice
samples from McMurdo Dry Valleys and Allan Hills Blue Ice Areas, East
Antarctica
Abstract
The oxygen and hydrogen isotopic composition in snow and ice have long
been utilized to reconstruct past temperatures of polar regions, under
the assumption that post-depositional processes such as sublimation do
not fractionate snow. In low-accumulation (<0.01 m yr-1) areas
near the McMurdo Dry Valleys in Antarctica surface snow and ice samples
have negative deuterium excess values (δD - 8*δ18O). This unique
phenomenon, only observed near the Dry Valleys, is not fully understood.
Here we use both an isotope-enabled general circulation model and an ice
physics model and establish that negative deuterium excess values can
only arise from precipitation if the majority of the moisture is sourced
from the Southern Ocean. However, the model results show that moisture
sourced from oceans north of 55°S contributes significantly
(>50%) to precipitation in Antarctica today. We thus
propose that sublimation must have occurred to yield the negative
deuterium excess values in snow observed in and near the Dry Valleys and
that solid-phase-diffusion in ice grains is sufficiently fast to allow
Rayleigh-like isotopic fractionation in similar environments. We
calculate that under present-day conditions at the Allan Hills outside
the Dry Valleys, 3 to 24% of the surface snow is lost due to
sublimation. Because a higher fraction of snow is expected to be
sublimed when accumulation rates are lower, the magnitude of δ18O and δD
enrichment due to sublimation will be higher during past cold periods
than at present, altering the relationship between the snow isotopic
composition and polar temperatures.