A Local Meteoric Water Line for Interior Alaska constrains Paleoclimate From 40,000 year old Relict Permafrost
Anthropogenic climate warming is degrading permafrost across Interior Alaska. Information from past warming events provides long-term perspectives of future trajectories, however, late Quaternary seasonal temperatures are poorly constrained. We established a stable water isotope meteoric water line for Interior Alaska and measured stable water isotope values from 126 permafrost cores representing different ice types deposited over the past ~40 ka (thousand years before 1950). Samples represent two late Quaternary warm periods: Marine Isotope Stage Three (MIS3; 57-29 ka) and the Holocene. Older samples provide insight into local climatic conditions slightly before the first archaeological evidence for Paleolithic huntergatherers in the region. From permafrost ice we calculate summer temperatures warmed ~10 °C between late MIS3 and today with six degrees of warming between 40-30 ka and 3 ka and an additional 4°C of warming since 3 ka. Half this recent 4°C warming has occurred over the past 70 years.
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Authors: Douglas, Thomas A., Barker, Amanda J., Monteath, Alistair J. ORCID record for Alistair J. Monteath, Froese, Duane G.