DOI: 10.26686/wgtn.17060279
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A Paleoclimate Reconstruction of the Little Ice Age to Modern Era Climate Conditions in the Eastern Ross Sea, Antarctica as Captured in the RICE Ice Core

Abstract: <p>The Little Ice Age (LIA) (1400-1850 AD) represents one of the most significant climatic shifts over the past 5000 years. Previous studies from Antarctica indicate generally cooler and stormier conditions during this period, but this pattern shows distinct spatial and temporal variability. The Roosevelt Island Climate Evolution (RICE) ice core provides a new opportunity to study the drivers behind this variability at annual/seasonal resolution, in a relatively under-sampled and climatically sensitive r… Show more

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“…Fitting a non-linear curve is one of the possibilities to deal with this problem (Brinkmann et al, 2002;Eom et al, 2015). To enable this non-linear curve fit the number of calibration levels for the analysis of the seasonally resolved samples (Brightley, 2017) has been increased to 34 levels, encompassing both the very low (sub-ppb) and very high concentration (several parts per million) range of these data. Before analysing the Holocene samples a new calibration was performed using freshly made calibration standards of the same 34 levels as developed for the seasonally resolved data.…”
Section: Development Of Calibration Functionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fitting a non-linear curve is one of the possibilities to deal with this problem (Brinkmann et al, 2002;Eom et al, 2015). To enable this non-linear curve fit the number of calibration levels for the analysis of the seasonally resolved samples (Brightley, 2017) has been increased to 34 levels, encompassing both the very low (sub-ppb) and very high concentration (several parts per million) range of these data. Before analysing the Holocene samples a new calibration was performed using freshly made calibration standards of the same 34 levels as developed for the seasonally resolved data.…”
Section: Development Of Calibration Functionsmentioning
confidence: 99%