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Paleothermometry by control methods

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Douglas R. MacAyeal
Affiliation:
Department of the Geophysical Sciences, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637, U.S.A.
John Firestone
Affiliation:
Geophysics Program AK-50, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, U.S.A.
Edwin Waddington
Affiliation:
Geophysics Program AK-50, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, U.S.A.
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Abstract

The recovery of past climatic conditions from ice-sheet borehole temperatures can best be accomplished using the calculus of variations (control methods) to minimize mismatch between the observed profile and a solution of the heat equation which depends on the unknown climate history. Here, we use control methods and a simple one-dimensional heat equation and the temperature depth profile observed at Dye-3 to infer the surface temperature of south Greenland over the last 30 000 years. This history illustrates the virtues that recommend control methods for future use in borehole-temperature analysis, namely: (i) it meets objective performance criteria, and (ii) its uncertainty can be established quantitatively. Our inferred climate history displays what may be the Younger Dryas cold event at about 9000 years BP. Borehole paleothermometry by control methods may thus resolve the controversy concerning the interpretation of Greenland ice-core isotope records.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1991
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Initial condition and terminal state for the demonstration of adjoint trajectory methods with synthetic data. The least-squares inuerse problem is to determine the surface-temperature history that changes the temperature profile from its initial state to its terminal state in 5000 years.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. The surface-temperature history inferred from the adjoint trajectory method compared with the known surface-temperature history used to fabricate the observed terminal state.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. Mismatch between the observed terminal state synthesized from the known surface-temperature history and the terminal state derived from the inferred surface-temperature history.

Figure 3

Fig. 4. Recent part of the long-term history of surface-temperature representing the gross features of the 100 000 year glacial cycle (Dahl-Jensen and Johnsen, 1986).

Figure 4

Fig. 5. Temperature deviations between the observed borehole temperature profile and a reference profile associated with a long-term climate history determined by Dahl-Jensen and Johnsen (1986). Observations of borehole temperature have been reported by Gundestrup and Hansen (1984) Also shown is the calculated temperature-depth profile associated with the inferred schedule of surface-temperature fluctuations derived from the control method.

Figure 5

Fig. 6. History of surface-temperature fluctuations inferred by control methods. The oscillations which affect the last 1500 year period are severe, and may not be entirely reliable. They can be reduced or eliminated by either increasing the spatial and temporal resolution of the finite-difference grid or by a more judicious choice of ∈ and η(t). (We recommend that ∈ be defined as a function of time, and that its value be increased over the period of the undesirable oscillations.)

Figure 6

Fig. 7. Mismatch between the calculated and observed temperature deviations in the borehole Fig. 5. This mismatch is lomer than that reported by Dahl-Jensen and Johnsen (1986) using trial-and-error methods to specify Ts(t).

Figure 7

Fig. 8. Inferred surface-temperature history for Dye-3, Greenland. This history is constructed by adding the infeired schedule of surface-temperature fluctuations Fig. 6 to the long-term reference climate Fig. 4. Also shown is the climate history inferred by Dahl-Jensen and Johnsen (1986) using the trial-and-error method.

Figure 8

Fig. 9. The model-resolution matrix R. The topography of the surface displayed on the left represents the values of the matrix elements seen as a function of position within a square dimensioned by the number of matrix rows and columns. A cross-section of this topograpliy (from A to A′) which represents the resolution of events occurring at about the time of the Younger Dry as is shown on the right. The degree to which the true surface-temperature history is degraded by the heat-diffusion process is measured by the spread of the non-zero matrix elements off the diagonal of the matrix. For the model-resolution matrix displayed here, the off-diagonal spread suggests that, if the true Younger Dry as event lasted exactly 1000 years, the inferred surface-temperature history would at best show a cool event which lasts about 5000 years.

Figure 9

Fig. 10. Sensitivity of the inferred surface-temperature history to changes in accumulation rate and vertical strain rate. The curves labeled “ice-age accumulation rate”, “present accumulation rate”, and “constant vertical strain rate” represent, respectively, the result of reducing the snow-accumulation rate to 0.245 m a−1, the result of increasing the snow accumulation rate to 0.49 ma−1 and the result of adopting Equation (33) for the vertical velocity field. Short-term oscillations over the last 1000 years of the history are intensified because of the reduced temporal resolution (100 year time steps) adopted for the sensitivity tests.

Figure 10

Fig. 11. Sensitivity of the inferred surface-temperature history to changes in ∈. As ∈ is increased, short-term oscillations over the recent part of the history diminish, hut detail in the ancient part of the history is lost.

Figure 11

Fig. 12. Sensitivity of the calculated borehole-temperature deviations to changing ∈.