Introduction
Ice sheets and ice caps serve as libraries of atmospheric history from which past climatic and environmental conditions mav he extrapolated. Glaciers at high elevations on the Qinghai–Tibetan (Q–T) Plateau cover an area of ≈57 000 km2 (Reference Shi and Wang.Shi and Wang, 1981) and, if judiciously selected, may provide a spatially coherent climate history for this region. The Plateau, one of the most imposing topographic features on the Earth’s surface, has a mean elevation of ≈4.5 km and comprises an area half that of the U.S.A. The sensible heat flux and the latent heat release over the Q–T Plateau drive the regionally intense monsoon circulation, and strongly influence global circulation patterns. Reliable meteorological observations are limited for much of this extensive region.
The primary ice-core records currently available from this area are from the Dunde ice cap (38°06′N, 96°24′E; 5323 m a.s.l.) on the northeastern margin of the Q–T Plateau and the Guliya ice cap (35°17′N, 81°29′E: 6710 m a.s.l.) on the far western margin. The proxy climatic histories from both these sites are of high (annual) resolution. The Plateau experiences a marked annual cycle in which 70–80% of the precipitation falls during the Northern Hemispheric summer producing a distinct visible stratigraphy in the glaciers which allows accurate dating of the ice cores and reconstruction of the net mass accumulation (Reference ThompsonThompson and others, 1989, Reference Thompson1993; Reference Thompson, Bradley and JonesThompson, 1992).
The Guliya ice cap is the highest, largest (> 200 km2) and thickest (308.6 m) subtropical ice cap yet investigated. It is part of an ice mass which extends over 8000 km2 in the western Kunlun Mountains. In a cooperative effort, investigators from the Byrd Polar, Research Center (BPRC) of The Ohio State University (OSU), U.S.A., and the Lanzhou Institute of Glacialogy and Geocryology (LIGG), China, undertook a 3 year field and laboratory program (1990–92) to study this very high-elevation ice cap. During the 1990 and 1991 field seasons, surface, snow-pit and shallow core samples were recovered. In the summer of 1992, the cooperative BPRC–LIGG expedition successfully recovered three ice cores, 34.5, 93.2 and 308.0 m in length. Annual accumulation is quite variable ranging from 140 to 260 mm w.e. among sites. The combination of relatively high (though variable) accumulation, 10 m borehole temperatures of –15.2° to –17.7°C and the distinct monsoonal climate produces the marked annual stratigraphy which is necessary to extract a high-quality ice-core record of climatic and environmental variability. This paper presents the most recent 1000 years of this ice core-derived history.
Field and Laboratory Methods
Table 1 presents the entire suite of cores drilled and pits sampled from 1990 to 1992. The 1990 expedition took place from September to October, after the monsoon season; the 1991 field program in May, prior to the onset of the monsoons; and the 1992 field program from July to August, during the primary accumulation season. Each year, pits were excavated and sampled for dust, δ 18O and chemical analyses at the different drill sites. Each year, ice thicknesses were measured with short-pulse radar at various locations around the ice cap. Ice thicknesses range from 103 m at the summit, to 200m at site 1, to 310 m at site 2. Based upon the thicknesses and the results from the pit samples, sites 1 and 2 were chosen for drilling to bedrock.
At site 1 (Fig. 1) an electromechanical drill was used in an air-filled hole to recover a core to 93.2 m where drilling was aborted because an unconformity in the ice layers was observed at 83m. This core was cut into 1783 samples in the field which were melted and put in bottles sealed with wax to prevent vapor transfer and preserve the isotopic record. At site 2 the electromechanical drill was used in a dry hole to 200 m, and from 200 m to bedrock (308.6m) a thermal drill was used with an alcohol/water mixture to ensure better core quality. No hiatus was observed in core 2, and the visible layers remained horizontal throughout. The entire core was returned frozen to the cold rooms at BPRC-OSU.
The visible stratigraphy of the cores was recorded in the field, and air-bubble characteristics and crystal sizes were determined at various intervals along core 2. All ice-core, surface and pit samples were analyzed for micro-particle concentrations (MPC), oxygen-isotopic ratios (δ18O) and selected chemical species (Cl−, NO3 − and SO4 2−). Core 2 was cut into 4300 samples for MPC and δ18O and 3200 samples for chemical analyses. MPC was measured using two Coulter counters (Model TAII) equipped with 30 and 100 μm aperture tubes which provide particle concentrations in sizes ranging in diameter from 0.63 to 40 μm. The concentrations of specific chemical species were determined using a Dionex Model 2010i ion chromatograph (see Reference Dai, Thompson and Mosley-ThompsonDai and others (1995) for methodological discussion). All samples (except δ18O) were analyzed in a class-100 clean room at BPRC, and δ18O was measured with a Finnegan Mat Delta-E mass spectrometer. Finally, the upper 20 m of the 34.5 m core drilled at site 2 were analyzed with high temporal resolution for solid particulate beta radioactivity (β) and tritium to locate in the core the massive 1962 Soviel Arctic atmospheric thermonuclear tests. The depth of this known time-stratigraphic horizon is useful for time-scale calibration.
Geophysical Studies
The Pole displacement in the Guliya strain net was measured in June 1991 and again in July 1992. The velocity vectors (Fig. 2a) reveal that the core 2 site, located over a topographic bedrock depression (Fig. 2b), experiences active ice flow toward the south-southeast at an average speed of 4.8 m a−1. The core 1 site (Fig. 2c), located near the margin of the ice cap, sits on a topographically smooth bedrock dome and exhibits little horizontal ice flow (Fig. 2a). Short-pulse radar data provided the thicknesses shown along the A–B transect (Fig. 2b) containing the core 2 site, and along the C–D transect (Fig. 2c) connecting the core 2 and core 1 sites.
Thermistors were used to measure borehole temperatures at each drill site (Fig. 3). 10 m temperatures range from −15.2° and −15.6°C at sites 1 and 2, respectively, to −17.4°C at the 1991 summit shallow drill site. At site 2, temperatures ranged from −15.6°C at 10 m to −5.6°C at 200 m, the depth where dry-hole drilling was suspended and fluid was added to the borehole. A basal temperature of −2.1°C was recorded four days after the completion of drilling and thus may not be representative of the equilibrium temperature due to the presence of the fluid. Nevertheless, the profile for the core 2 borehole demonstrates that the Guliya ice cap thermally resembles a “polar” ice cap.
Discussion
The major drill sites on the Guliya ice cap are located near the 400 mbar level in the Earth’s atmosphere where high-level plateau and mountain processes are neither well documented nor understood. The firn-to-ice transition at sites 1 and 2 lies within the upper meter of the ice cap. This observation was unexpected given the higher elevation and lower temperatures on Guliya compared to those encountered on other glaciers in the Q–T Plateau region. For example, the Dunde ice cap, which is lower in elevation (5325 m) and warmer (−7.1°C at 10m), has a firn-to-ice transition at 30 m. Even the Gregoriev ice cap in the Tien Shan (42°N,78°E; 4660 m a.s.l.), to the north, is warmer than the Dunde ice cap, but it contains a firn-to-ice transition at 22 m (Reference ThompsonThompson and others, 1993).
The annual accumulation (A n) varies across the Guliya ice cap. Accumulation was measured by three methods: (1) accumulation stakes, (2) visible stratigraphy in pits, and (3) insoluble particulate β and tritium horizons. Measurements from accumulation Poles vary from 650 mm a−1 of snow (256mm w.e.) at the summit to 380 and 320 mm a−1 (169 and 143 mm w.e.) at sites 1 and 2, respectively. These values are consistent with stake results (Reference AgetaAgeta and others, 1989) from 1985 to 1987 on the Chongce ice cap, 30 km west of Guliya. Here accumulation ranges from 150 mm w.e. at 6000 m to 300 mm w.e. at the Chongce summit (6200 m).
A pit was excavated in 1992 adjacent to the accumulation pole at site 2 where the 308.6 m core was drilled. The visible dust layer between 0.55 and 0.70 m, coupled with the analyses of MPC, δ18O, and chemical species (Fig. 4), indicate a 1991/92 layer thickness of ≈500 nun of snow or 220 mm w.e. Figure 5 illustrates the insoluble particulate β and tritium profiles from a 34.5 m core drilled at site 2 in 1992. The highest activity occurs at 5.5 m, and likely corresponds to the massive Soviet Arctic atmospheric thermonuclear testing of 1962/63. If correct, this indicates that A n, at site 2 was 180 mm w.e. from 1963 to 1992. The single-year value (220 mm w.e.) from the pit at site 2 is consistent with the longer-term average determined from the beta radioactivity profile for the last 29 years.
1000 Year Guliya Ice-Core History
Based on the pit and surface studies discussed above, the visible layers appear to be annual and may be used to date the core and extract annual layer thicknesses for the last 8000 years. This paper discusses only the most recent 1000 years.
The visible annual dust layers were used to reconstruct the net accumulation for the past 1000 years. Although layer thicknesses can be measured throughout both cores (Fig. 6), they do not directly represent the thickness of the originally deposited layer. The original layer is thinned and stretched as new snow accumulates and as the ice flows outward; therefore, the thinning of each layer must be estimated. This was done using a simple flow model discussed by Reference Thompson, Mosley-Thompson, Bofzan and Koci.Thompson and others (1985, Reference Thompson1989). The reconstructions presented here are particularly robust as the upper 100 m of the core comprise only one-third of the total ice thickness. Thus, this part of the core sits well above the bed and should be free of problems associated with basal topography and potentially contorted flow at depth.
This proxy reconstruction provides the far glimpse of the history of A n at high elevations in far western China. The A n records from Guliya and Dunde are compared (Fig. 7) with the historical wetness/dryness index for the eastern half of China (Reference ZhangZhang, 1981) since 1500 AD. The low-frequency trends which are fairly consistent between the two ice-core records are out of phase with those in the lower elevations of eastern China. Generally wetter conditions on the Q–T Plateau from 1500 to 1700 AD and during the 20th century are contemporaneous with drier conditions in eastern China (Reference Domrös and Gongbing.Domrös and Gongbing, 1988; Reference Want and Zhang.Wang and Zhang, 1992), suggesting an anti-phase relationship in the lower frequencies of the precipitation histories between the high Q–T Plateau and the eastern lowlands of China. Analyses of rainfall patterns during the 17th century (Reference ZhangZhang and Crowley, 1989) indicate that dry conditions were prevalent primarily in northern and western China. They suggest that this pattern might reflect suppression of summer monsoon development, possibly as a result of expanded Eurasian snow cover (Reference Dey, Kathuria and Kumar.Dey and others, 1985; Reference Barnett, Dömenil, Schlese and Roeckner.Barnett and others, 1988). The southeast and southwest monsoon systems are linked, but not in a simple way (Reference RamageRamag, 1971, p. 186, 238; Reference Barry and Chorley.Barry and Chorley, 1992. p. 247).
The 1000 year A n history reconstructed from annual layer thicknesses in the upper 100 m of Guliya core 2 is compared in Figure 8 with the only other comparable high-resolution, non-polar A n record, that from Quelccaya ice cap in the southern Andes of Peru (Reference Thompson, Mosley-Thompson, Bofzan and Koci.Thompson and others, 1985, Reference Thompson, Mosley-Thompson, Dansgaard and Grootes.1986, Reference Thompson., Davis, Mosley-Thompson and Liu.1988). The Guliya record reveals high-frequency A n oscillations superimposed upon lower-frequency A n oscillations corresponding to three extended wet periods (1000–1075 AD, 1400–1775 AD and 1900–present) and two extended dry periods (1075–1375 and 1775–1900 AD). The similarity between these A n histories is striking (Fig. 8), as the sites are 20 000 km apart on opposite sites of the Pacific basin. During the last 1000 years major periods of drought and wetness appear to have been contemporaneous in the southern Andes and on the Tibetan Plateau suggesting a teleconnection between these regions. In fact, meteorological observations for the last 100 years reveal a well-established teleconnection for higher-frequency climate events such as the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) (Reference NamiasNamais, 1963; Reference Rasmusson and Carpenter.Rasmusson and Carpenter, 1983; Reference Barnett, Dömenil, Schlese and Roeckner.Barnett and others, 1988). Now, for the first time, longer temporal perspectives available from ice-core records suggest that lower-frequency teleconnections may exist as well.
Additional environmental information for the last 1000 years is available from the Guliya ice cap. Figure 9 presents the decadal averages of MPC, δ 18O, NO3 −, SO4 2− and Cl−. The most negative δ 18O values (generally indicating lower temperatures) occur at the beginning of the current millennium. Thus, this record does not indicate the presence of the “Medieval Warm Epoch” (MWE) and supports the suggestion by Reference Hughes and DiazHughes and Diaz (1994) that the MWE was not global in extent. From 1300 to 1800 AD, contemporaneous with much of the “Little Ice Age” (LIA), δ 18O appears more enriched (suggesting warmer conditions) similar to the ice-core δ 18O histories from sites in the Antarctic Peninsula (Reference Aristarain, Jouzel and Pourchet.Aristarain and others, 1986; Reference Peel, Bradley and JonesPeel, 1992; Reference ThompsonThompson and others, 1995) and at Siple Station at the base of the Peninsula (Reference Mosley-Thompson, Bradley and Jones.Mosley-Thompson, 1992). The major isotopically warmer and cooler periods are not synchronous for Dunde and Guliya although both records show a persistence of warmer conditions since the 1940s (see Reference Tandong and Thompson.Yao and Thompson, 1992; Reference Lin, Thompson, Davis and Mosley-ThompsonLin and others, 1995).
There are two major periods of enhanced atmospheric dust concentrations, 1430–1550 and 1680–1900 AD, with shorter events (a few decades or less) centered on 1150, 1300 and 1600 AD as well as from 1950 to the present. Most of the LIA period is characterized by elevated dust concentrations, consistent with the historical dust-fall records of Zhang (1984) and with ice-core dust records from the South Pole (Reference Mosley-Thompson, Thompson, Dai, Davis and Lin.Mosley-Thompson and others, 1993) and Quelccaya ice cap (Reference Thompson, Bradley and JonesThompson, 1992). The NO3 −, SO4 2− and Cl− records show no long-term trends over the millennium, suggesting no anthropogenic contribution in the snow at this high-elevation site. The fluxes of NO3 −, SO4 2− and Cl− are consistently high from 1000 to 1300 AD and remain consistently low thereafter to the present. All three anions exhibit brief (one or two decades long), contemporaneous concentration peaks around 1590 and 1710 AD. A second peak around 1620 occurs in NO3 − and Cl−, but not in SO4 2−. The major peaks in soluble anions occur when insoluble dust levels are low, suggesting that the soluble fraction of the aerosols has a different source from the insoluble fraction. In general, the more negative δ 18O values from 1000 to 1300 AD are associated with higher concentrations of NO3 −, SO4 2− and Cl− and lower concentrations of insoluble dust.
Conclusions
Analyses of the ice cores from Guliya ice cap provide the first high-resolution, multi-proxy climate history from the far western Kunlun, China. This information should prove invaluable in the study of both regional and global climatic and environmental change on time-scales of decades to millennia. The δ 18O records from the Dunde and Guliya ice caps in China and the Gregoriev ice cap reveal a significant enrichment in 18O (indicating warming) over the past few decades (Reference ThompsonThompson and Others, 1993; Reference Lin, Thompson, Davis and Mosley-ThompsonLin and others, 1995). Unlike the results from Dunde, the Guliya δ 18O values for recent decades are not unprecedented (unique) in the last 1000 years. However, the recent warming over the Q–T Plateau is consistent with model results (e.g. Reference Hansen and Lebedeff.Hansen and others, 1988) suggesting that the central region of the Asian continent may be one of the first places to exhibit an unambiguous signal of the anticipated “greenhouse warming” as it is far from the mitigating influences of oceans. More confident projections about future climate changes require better description and understanding of the sources of past natural climatic variance on the same time-scales (Reference Bradley and Jones.Bradley and Jones, 1993). Certainly, the potential impact of global warming on the strength of the monsoon system could be significant and warrants investigation (Reference Meehl and Washington.Meehl and Washington, 1993).
The 308.6 m core from Guliya is the longest ice core retrieved from an elevation greater than 4000 m. Based upon (1) our preliminary examination of air bubbles and crystal sizes, (2) subsequent analyses of selected sections over the complete length of the core for δ 18O and dust concentration, and (3) a preliminary time-scale calculation based on visible dust-layer thicknesses, it appears that the Guliya core may contain ice deposited over the last 400 000 years. If so, the experience from the Greenland GISP2 core (Reference Grootes, Stuiver, White, Johnsen and Jouzel.Grootes and others, 1993) dictates extremely careful study and cautious interpretation of the lower part of the core, as the potential for disturbance is high in the lower part of the core. Thus, understanding the records of the last millennium presented in this paper provides a starting-point for accurate interpretation of the much longer histories preserved in the lower 200 m of the Guliya deep core.
Acknowledgements
This Research was supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation’s Office of Climate Dynamics and the Division of Polar Programs (ATM-8519794, ATM-89116635, DPP-9014931), the National Geographical Society (3323-86, 4309-90 and 4522-91), The Ohio State University and the National Natural Science Foundation of China. The efforts of all American, Chinese, Russian and Peruvian field participants are gratefully acknowledged. We thank the Polar Ice Core Office and B. Koci, in particular, for drilling the deep ice cores. Dr G. Larson of Michigan State University conducted the tritium analyses, and the illustrations were prepared by J. Nagy. This is contribution No. 914 of the Byrd Polar Research Center.