Researchers of the Ca' Foscari
University of Venice and the Austrian Academy of Science drill an ice core at
Weißseespitze, Ötztal Alps, in 2018. Credit: Prof Andrea Fischer
Ice cores taken from glaciers
reveal the air pollution of the past, using atmospheric particles incorporated
in snow that fell on the glacier and became ice. Now, scientists have extracted
a record of thousands of years' worth of air pollution from 9.5 meters of ice
at the Weißseespitze glacier, close to the border between Austria and Italy.
But this ice is under threat from global warming, and scientists warn that it
is now a race against time to capture critical climate information locked in
these glaciers before it's gone forever.
"These remarkable climate
archives function much like a history book: past atmospheric conditions and
environmental changes are recorded in their layers," said Dr. Azzurra
Spagnesi of the University Ca' Foscari of Venice, lead author of the article
in Frontiers in Earth Science.
"Alpine glaciers offer a
unique opportunity to investigate the critical transition between
pre-industrial and industrial times, because of their proximity to human
settlements."
Frozen in time
In 2019, the team visited
Weißseespitze and drilled down to the bedrock to take an ice core nearly 10
meters long. They used argon isotope data to estimate the age of its layers,
showing that the surface of the glacier formed between 1552 and 1708 CE, while
the deepest layer dated back to 349 BCE and 420 CE.
Then they analyzed the core for
traces of 18 different elements, microcharcoal, levoglucosan—a chemical compound that
forms when wood burns—and carboxylic and dicarboxylic acids.
The summit of Weißseespitze in 2023. The
dark surface shows significant melting. Credit: Prof Andrea Fischer
"Between
700 and 1200 CE, lead and other metals showed very low concentrations,
reflecting the regional background of a mostly unpolluted pre-industrial
environment," explained Spagnesi. "From roughly 950 CE onward, peaks
in arsenic, lead, copper, and silver appear, corresponding to periods of
intensified medieval mining and smelting in the Alps and other European
regions."
"Some of the strongest metal peaks
also coincide with major volcanic eruptions, as well as periods of dry climate
and increased dust transport," Spagnesi added. "This suggests that
both natural events and human activities contributed to the chemical signals
preserved in the ice."
The scientists found a striking peak in
chemical pollution between approximately 902 and 1280 CE. They compared this to
the levels of microcharcoal found in cores of peat taken from nearby swampy
areas and found matching peaks, which confirms that fires were more common and
more intense in this region during this period.
"The elevated fire signal we
observe during the roughly century-long drought between about 950 and 1040 CE
is likely the result of several interacting factors," said Spagnesi.
"Such dry conditions can promote
cycles of vegetation growth followed by desiccation, creating highly flammable
landscapes that are more prone to burning.
"At the same time, human activity
in Alpine regions appears to have intensified. Historical and
paleoenvironmental evidence points to increased grassland management,
agricultural expansion, and land clearing, all of which commonly involved fire.
Periods of conflict may have contributed locally, either through deliberate
burning or accidental ignitions."
"However, although the age–depth
scale was substantially improved by adding 39Ar dating to the radiocarbon
constraints previously used, the remaining uncertainties are still relatively
large," cautioned Spagnesi. "This makes it more challenging to link
individual chemical peaks to specific events."
Melting away
At Weißseespitze, local mining and
other human activities drove peaks in pollution, while natural factors like
volcanoes amplified them. But anthropogenic emissions can only account for
about 7% of the air pollution recorded in the ice core.
Emissions caused by humans appear
as peaks against a comparatively stable, natural background—which is sadly not
the case today.
The scientists have continued to
return to Weißseespitze for research. But alarmingly, a visit to the drilling
site in 2025 showed that the ice was now only 5.5 meters deep. Unless we act
now to sample these disappearing glaciers, the information they carry will be
lost.
"Glaciers in the Ötztal Alps
are projected to disappear within the coming decades," said Spagnesi.
"If glaciers disappear, the chemical and physical information they contain will be lost forever, leaving gaps in our understanding of past climate variability. In this sense, preserving glaciers is not just about protecting ice. It is about safeguarding the memory of Earth's climate."
Provided by Frontiers
Source: A race against time to save Alpine ice cores that record medieval mining, fires, and volcanoes


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