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Using ice core measurements from Taylor Glacier, Antarctica, to calibrate in situ cosmogenic 14 C production rates by muons

Title: Using ice core measurements from Taylor Glacier, Antarctica, to calibrate in situ cosmogenic 14 C production rates by muons
Authors: Dyonisius, Michael N.; Petrenko, Vasilii V.; Smith, Andrew M.; Hmiel, Benjamin; Neff, Peter D.; Yang, Bin; Hua, Quan; Schmitt, Jochen; Shackleton, Sarah A.; Buizert, Christo; Place, Philip F.; Menking, James A.; Beaudette, Ross; Harth, Christina; Kalk, Michael; Roop, Heidi A.; Bereiter, Bernhard; Armanetti, Casey; Vimont, Isaac; Englund Michel, Sylvia; Brook, Edward J.; Severinghaus, Jeffrey P.; Weiss, Ray F.; McConnell, Joseph R.
Source: Dyonisius, Michael N.; Petrenko, Vasilii V.; Smith, Andrew M.; Hmiel, Benjamin; Neff, Peter D.; Yang, Bin; Hua, Quan; Schmitt, Jochen; Shackleton, Sarah A.; Buizert, Christo; Place, Philip F.; Menking, James A.; Beaudette, Ross; Harth, Christina; Kalk, Michael; Roop, Heidi A.; Bereiter, Bernhard; Armanetti, Casey; Vimont, Isaac; Englund Michel, Sylvia; . (2023). Using ice core measurements from Taylor Glacier, Antarctica, to calibrate in situ cosmogenic 14 C production rates by muons. The Cryosphere, 17(2), pp. 843-863. Copernicus Publications 10.5194/tc-17-843-2023
Publisher Information: Copernicus Publications
Publication Year: 2023
Collection: BORIS (Bern Open Repository and Information System, University of Bern)
Subject Terms: 530 Physics; 000 Computer science; knowledge & systems; 540 Chemistry; 550 Earth sciences & geology
Description: Cosmic rays entering the Earth’s atmosphere produce showers of secondary particles such as protons, neutrons, and muons. The interaction of these particles with oxygen-16 (16O) in minerals such as ice and quartz can produce carbon-14 (14C). In glacial ice, 14C is also incorporated through trapping of 14C-containing atmospheric gases (14CO2, 14CO, and 14CH4). Understanding the production rates of in situ cosmogenic 14C is important to deconvolve the in situ cosmogenic and atmospheric 14C signals in ice, both of which contain valuable paleoenvironmental information. Unfortunately, the in situ 14C production rates by muons (which are the dominant production mechanism at depths of > 6m solid ice equivalent) are uncertain. In this study, we use measurements of in situ 14C in ancient ice (> 50 ka) from the Taylor Glacier, an ablation site in Antarctica, in combination with a 2D ice flow model to better constrain the compound-specific rates of 14C production by muons and the partitioning of in situ 14C between CO2, CO, and CH4. Our measurements show that 33.7% (11.4%; 95% confidence interval) of the produced cosmogenic 14C forms 14CO and 66.1% (11.5%; 95% confidence interval) of the produced cosmogenic 14C forms 14CO2. 14CH4 represents a very small fraction (< 0.3%) of the total. Assuming that the majority of in situ muogenic 14C in ice forms 14CO2, 14CO, and 14CH4, we also calculated muogenic 14C production rates that are lower by factors of 5.7 (3.6–13.9; 95% confidence interval) and 3.7 (2.0–11.9; 95% confidence interval) for negative muon capture and fast muon interactions, respectively, when compared to values determined in quartz from laboratory studies (Heisinger et al., 2002a, b) and in a natural setting (Lupker et al., 2015). This apparent discrepancy in muogenic 14C production rates in ice and quartz currently lacks a good explanation and requires further investigation.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
Relation: https://boris.unibe.ch/185316/
Availability: https://boris.unibe.ch/185316/1/Dyonisius_14C_cosmogenic_production_Taylor_Glacier_TC_23.pdf; https://boris.unibe.ch/185316/
Rights: info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Accession Number: edsbas.18460362
Database: BASE