journal of Claciology (2016), 62(231) 54-61 doi: 10.101 7/jog.2016.9 ©The Author(s) 2016. This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons. org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Initial reconnaissance for a South Georgia ice core P. A. MAYEWSKI,1 A. KULI,1 G. CASASSA,2'3 M. AREVALO,3 D. A. DIXON/ B. GRIGHOLM,1 M.J. HANDLEY,1 H. HOFFMANN,4 D. S. INTRONE,1 A. G. KULI,1 M. POTOCKI,1 S. B. SNEED1 1 Climate Change Institute, University of Maine, Orono, Maine, USA 2Geoestuclios, Santiago, Chile 3Universidad Magallanes, Punta Arenas, Chile 4Institut für Umweltrphysik, Universität Heidelberg, Germany Correspondence: P. A Mayewski ABSTRACT. We present the first snow/ice chemistry and ice radar results ever collected from South Georgia as part of an initial reconnaissance with the ultimate goal of assessing the feasibility of a South Georgia ice core to reconstruct past climate in the South Atlantic. South Georgia is well situated to capture a record of past atmospheric chemical composition over the South Atlantic and of past variability in the position and intensity of the austral westerlies. The question is how well preserved an ice core record can be recovered from a region experiencing accelerated melting? The results presented in this paper offer only a preliminary step in determining the feasibility of future deep ice coring on South Georgia. However, this initial reconnaissance does provide some basic information including: the chemistry of the atmosphere over South Georgia relative to other Southern Hemisphere ice coring sites; the potential for preservation of 'annual layers' in old ice on the island; a possible age for deep ice in the region; and an estimate of glacier health in the lower elevation regions of the island. KEYWORDS: Sub Antarctic islands, climate change, ice cores, glacier volume, ice chemistry, radio echo sounding 1. INTRODUCTION In recent decades, air temperatures over portions of coastal Antarctica, the Southern Ocean and the winter atmosphere over Antarctica have exhibited record warming resulting in catastrophic disintegration of Antarctic ice shelves and coastal glaciers (ACCE, 2009). As a consequence of stratospheric ozone depletion over Antarctica and tropospheric greenhouse gas warming (Thompson and Solomon, 2002), there has been a significant poleward displacement of the polar jet and intensification of the polar westerlies (poleward (winter 3.38°S; summer 1.88°S) and intensifying (up to 6%) between 1981-1990 and 2001-10) (Mayewski and others, 2012). The current rate and magnitude is potentially unsurpassed in the last 5200 a (Mayewski and others, 2012). Further, the resultant steeper latitudinal (N-S) thermal gradient has left much of interior Antarctica at least temporarily isolated from the full force of greenhouse gas warming and sea ice extent surrounding much of Antarctica has increased (Turner and others, 2009). Although warming is clearly impacting sub-Antarctic glacier extent (ACCE, 2009) ice core records recovered from carefully selected sites may still offer valuable reconstructions of past climate. South Georgia has a particularly advantageous location, placing it in the direct path of westerly winds (Fig. 1) dominated by marine air, and a variety of South American crustal, terrestrial biogenic and anthropogenic chemical sources from as far north as the Amazon. As a result South Georgia ice may contain records that capture past changes in the intensity and latitudinal range of atmospheric circulation systems such as the westerlies. Changes in the strength and position of the westerlies have significant impacts on moisture balance, storminess and northward penetration of cold surface ocean currents on both the west and east coasts of southern South America (Mayewski and others, 2015). South Georgia also receives intermittent air mass intrusions from the sub-tropics of eastern South America associated with El Nino (La Nina) southward (northward) displacement of mean circulation over the South Atlantic (Yuan, 2004) that could be useful in assessing polar-tropical teleconnections. Finally changes in air chemistry resulting from changes in the passageways of air masses over chemistry source regions could impact nutrient deposition over marine and terrestrial ecosystems in the South Atlantic region. South Georgia is, therefore, well placed to offer a record of past climate change over the South Atlantic. The major uncertainty, however, is how complete or robust an ice core record remains in South Georgia? South Georgia's climate is classified as polar since it is south of the Polar Front. At sea level, winter temperatures are close to freezing (Fig. 2) and proximity to the Antarctic Current results in cold surface waters although, sea ice rarely forms around the island in winter. Dominant westerly winds result in harsher conditions on the northwestern side of the island compared with the southeast side, where descending winds yield milder and drier conditions. Annual precipitation is ~1500 mm and summer snowline is ~300 m a.s.l. on the northwest side of the island (https://en.wikipedia.org/ wiki/SouthGeorgiaandtheSouthSandwichIslands). Incoming radiation levels are low (maximum ~21% of total available) due to clouds and local topography. Elevations on the island's interior plateau are up to 1000 m a.s.l. and climbing teams (S. Novak, 2014, personal communication) report the presence of dry snow zones on the interior plateau, indicating suitable conditions for a well preserved ice core record in these regions. The highest peak on the Island is Mount Paget (2935 m a.s.l.), but this Downloaded from https:/www.cambridge.org/core. University of South Bohemia, on 15 Feb 2017 at 13:49:23, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https:/www.cambridge.org/core/terms . https://doi.org/! 0.1017/jog.2016.9 Mayewski and others: Initial reconnaissance for a South Ceorgia ice core 55 ECMWF ERA-lracrim Annual 1979-2014 0 2 A 6 8 10 12 14 16 Wind Speed at 10 meters (m/s) Fig. 1. Red circle indicates location of South Ceorgia directly in the path of the westerlies. mountain and others above 2000 m a.s.l. are either too small to preserve an ice cap or require helicopter support to avoid the heavily crevassed slopes surrounding the mountains. A limited number of climbing teams have ascended these mountains, but transport of equipment, needed for drilling to bedrock, through the crevasses and icefalls surrounding these sites is unrealistic. There is at this time no possibility of helicopter support on the island or from offshore so our search for a deep dri I ling site has been confined to regions, where future drilling could realistically be undertaken via oversnow traverse from the coast. ECMWF ERA-lnlsrini JJA I979-20W -60 -50 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30 40 50 Temperature at 2 meters (°C) Fig. 2. Red circle indicates location of South Ceorgia within the Polar Front. Winter (JJA (June, July, August) temperature plotted. Previous research on Marinelli Glacier in the Cordillera Darwin, Tierra del Fuego, at nearly the same latitude as South Georgia and at an elevation of 1823 m a.s.l. (Grigholm and others, 2009), revealed significant surface melting. The mean maximum temperature at Ushuaia, located on the coast, 90 km east of Marinelli Glacier, is 13°C (http://www.weather-and-climate.com), and occurs in January and February. Assuming a temperature lapse rate of 6°C krrT1, at an elevation of 1823 m on Cordillera Darwin, the mean maximum temperature in January/February should be —h2°C. Clearly there must be warmer days with higher maximum temperature at 1823 m on Marinelli Glacier, but already a mean maximum temperature of +2°C is sufficiently high to explain the extensive snowmelt observed. A similar estimation for South Georgia suggests a mean maximum temperature of —2°C in February at an elevation of 1823 m, based on a mean maximum temperature of 9°C recorded at Grytviken (http://www.weather-and-climate. com), located on the warmer northeastern coast of South Georgia. Therefore, cold snow and ice should definitely exist at elevations above 2000 m on South Georgia, with suitable microclimate conditions to preserve an ice core record. However, South Georgia is subjected to extremely strong winds year round that at elevation, could lead to significant loss of surface snow thus seriously compromising records retrieved from the highest regions of the island. Further, unlike the Cordillera Darwin, South Georgia is located south of the Polar Front so that ice located at lower elevations than 2000 m or very old ice retrieved through drilling and from glacier margins warrants reconnaissance investigation. Waiting much longer only increases the likelihood of losing any record that might still be preserved. In October 2012 our research team joined a crew of three on board the 73' sailboat Pelagic Australis and set sail to South Georgia from the Falkland Islands. Our goals were to retrieve a shallow firn core, to assess the potential for identifying 'annual layering' in old ice, and to conduct preliminary ice radar measurements. Our window of opportunity for this first reconnaissance was significantly shortened by unusually heavy October winds, so we did not have sufficient time to collect a firn core from our proposed site on the Kohl Plateau (Fig. 3) at ~900 m a.s.l., however, we were able to collect preliminary information that highlights the valuable climate record potentially available from a South Georgia ice core and confirms the potential for more detailed future investigations. In the short period available for fieldwork we collected one 2.5 m deep snowpit at 550 m a.s.l. from Szielasko Ice Cap on the Barff Peninsula (Fig. 3). Unfortunately this is the warmer north side of the island and the site is surrounded by ice free, dark rock. The snowpit yielded unmelted winter/spring snow deposited over ice, which was no doubt, refrozen melt from the previous warm season or older. At Szielasko Ice Cap we also measured surface elevation and ice thickness with radar sounding, to assess the potential span of an ice core record and to evaluate recent elevation changes. In addition, we collected two short (~1 m) cores from the terminal reaches of the Nordenskjold and Fortuna Glaciers on the northeastern side of the island (Fig. 3). While none of these locations are suitable for the collection of continuous ice core records that include modern snow, they do represent the first chemical sampling of snow and ice from South Georgia and the results offer promise for future study. Downloaded from https:/www.cambridge.org/core. University of South Bohemia, on 15 Feb 2017 at 13:49:23, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https:/www.cambridge.org/core/terms . https://doi.org/! 0.1017/jog.2016.9 56 Mayewski and others: Initial reconnaissance for a South Ceorgia ice core Fig. 3. Image captured by the Landsat-8 satellite on 16 February 2015 USCS/ESA. South Ceorgia is ~186km from northwest to south east and ~36 km at its widest point. 2. ICE CORE CHEMISTRY - METHODS AND RESULTS We utilized the Climate Change Institute's W.M. Keck Laser Ice Core Facility LA-ICP-SFMS (Laser Ablation-lnductively Coupled Plasma-Sector Field Mass Spectrometry) system for the ultra-high resolution glaciochemical analyses of the ice cores reported in this study. Components include a Thermo Element 2 ICP-SFMS (also used for the lower resolution trace element sampling of the snowpit in this study), coupled to a New Wave UP-213 laser system and the Sayre Cell™, a cryocell chamber designed to seal a 1 m ice core from the surrounding air, while maintaining a uniform temperature of —15°C, and a 121 urn sampling resolution (Sneed and others, 2015). Hydrogen isotope ratios (5D) were measured via Cr reduction with a Eurovector elemental analyzer coupled to a Micromass Isoprime mass spectrometer. Samples of particulate organic carbon for 14C analysis were decontaminated, extracted and combusted at Heidelberg University resulting in C02-gas for direct 14C analysis via the gas ion source at the MICADAS-AMS in Mannheim (Kromer and others, 2013). 14C measurements were made on ice from the short cores recovered at the margins of Fortuna and Nordenskjold Glaciers. Calibrated 14C ages of 8633-9397 a BP and 10 295-10 997 a BP, respectively, suggest that the ice terminii age, potentially the oldest ice on the island, could be in the range 8500-11 000 a BP. While we report these dates, we caution that future investigation, including 14C dating of local ice-free region materials is clearly essential, in light of reservoir effects potentially introduced by the incorporation of local dusts and sediment. Figure 4 shows 5D from the Szielasko snowpit and the Fortuna and Nordenskjold terminii short cores. We assume that the snowpit data covers winter/spring 2011/12 and the range, —1 70 to — 100%o, suggests significant enough variability to represent storms or seasons. Lacking longer records, it is unclear if the values are controlled by temperature, snow accumulation rate, transport distance and/or source region. The significantly older glacier margin short cores reveal significantly less depleted values (Fortuna —62 to —54; Nordenskjold —99 to —81) and significantly subdued variability suggesting post-depositional alteration of the water isotope record or possibly warmer and shorter transport conditions 8500-11 000 a ago, which if the 14C age is correct, coincide with widespread Antarctic early Holocene warming from 9000 to 11 500 a BP (Steig and others, 2000). Figure 4 also reveals calcium (crustal source), iron (crustal and marine source), and sodium (marine source) ICP-SFMS 0.1 0.; 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 Core length (cm) Fig. 4. 8D (deuterium), calcium, iron and sodium ICP-SFMS values for Szielasko snowpit, Fortuna and Nordenskjold Glacier terminii ice cores. Cray highlighting shows sections analyzed by LA-ICP-SFMS in Figure 5. Downloaded from https:/www.cambridge.org/core. University of South Bohemia, on 15 Feb 2017 at 13:49:23, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https:/www.cambridge.org/core/terms . https://doi.org/! 0.1017/jog.2016.9 Mayewski and others: Initial reconnaissance for a South Ceorgia ice core 57 20 40 60 SOxm- Distance (mm) along core Fig. 5. Calcium and iron LA-ICP-SFMS for Fortuna and Nordenskjöld termini ice samples. Location of samples highlighted in gray in Figure 4. derived concentrations for the Szielasko snowpit, and for the Fortuna and Nordenskjold terminii cores. Winter/spring Szielasko snowpit concentrations are higher in calcium than most of the core samples. Winter/spring Szielasko iron concentration is in between those of Nordenskjold and Fortuna, respectively. Szielasko sodium concentration is notably higher than in either core. The generally higher calcium and notably higher sodium concentrations in modern winter/spring snow may suggest stronger westerly winds and/or a more exposed local dust sources, albeit based on limited data. Ü7-S- *07-i Fig. 6. Distribution of concentration data presented in Table 1. Map base from ETOPO! (Amante and Eakins, 2009). To investigate the potential for the preservation of 'annual layers', 121 u ultra-high resolution LA-ICP-SFMS measurements from 9 cm long sections of the termini cores are presented in Figure 5. Perhaps most intriguing is the ~10 mm, fairly consistent variability in both the Fortuna and Nordenskjold LA-ICP-SFMS calcium and iron data. The variability is similar to that induced by 'annual layering'. However, knowledge of modern day annual layering (net mass balance) is needed before assigning the variability described here as 'annual'. Nevertheless there is the potential to recover a long record of 'annually-resolved' past mass balance potentially covering the Holocene. Figure 6 and Tables 1 and 2 provide an initial comparison of the levels of crustal (Sr, Ba, La, Ce, Pb, Li, S, Ca, Ti, Mn, Fe, Na, Mg), marine (Sr, Ba, Pb, S, Ca, Fe, Na, Mg) and anthropogenic (Ba, Pb, S) source elements from ice core sites in Antarctica, Chile, New Zealand and South Georgia. Levels of several elements (Sr, Ba, La, Ce, Pb, Li, S, Ca, Ti, Mn, Fe, Na, Mg) are in general higher for extra-Antarctic sites (South Georgia, New Zealand (Tasman) and the Chilean Andes (TPG) than for northerly Antarctic sites (Antarctic Peninsula (DP), and coastal West Antarctica (RICE), which in turn are higher than West Antarctic (ITASE; Dixon and others, 2013) and South Pole (SPRESSO; Korotkikh and others, 2014) ice core values. Szielasko winter snowpit values for Sr, Na, and Mg are the highest in the record demonstrating the significant marine influence impacting South Georgia. Anomalously high Ba values at South Pole are attributed to local station anthropogenic sources (building Table 1. Time period covered, site name and location for records presented in Figure 6 Time period Core or snowpit Location Winter 2012 SG-12-snowpit Szelasko Ice Cap, South Georgia 10474 a BP SG-12-Fortuna Glacier terminus, South Georgia 9010 a BP SG-12-Nordenskjold Glacier terminus, South Georgia 1981-2011 TPG-12-1 Tupungatito Glacier, Chile 1981-2007 DP-07-1 Detroit Plateau, Antarctic Peninsula 2002-10 RICE Roosevelt Island, West Antarctica 1980-2000 SPRESSO South Pole, Antarctica 1988-2000 ITASE-00-2 West Antarctica 1980-2001 ITASE-01-4 West Antarctica 1980-2002 ITASE-02-1 West Antarctica 1 966-1 975 ITASE-02-1 West Antarctica 1 967-1 975 ITASE-02-5 West Antarctica 1960-1983 ITASE-03-1 West Antarctica 1 955-1 975 ITASE-03-1 West Antarctica 1955-1966 ITASE-03-3 West Antarctica 2002-06 ITASE-06-2 West Antarctica 2000-2006 ITASE-07-4 West Antarctica 2000-2006 ITASE-07-5 West Antarctica 1992-2005 Tasman Glacier New Zealand Alps Downloaded from https:/www.cambridge.org/core. University of South Bohemia, on 15 Feb 2017 at 13:49:23, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https:/www.cambridge.org/core/terms . https://doi.Org/10.1017/jog.2016.9 Table 2. Mean chemical concentration data for sites compared in this study (Fig. 6) Core or snowpit Sr Ba La Ce Pb Li S Ca Ti Mn Fe Na Mg ng L-1 ng IT1 ng IT1 ng L-1 ng IT1 ng IT1 K L-1 K L-1 ng IT1 ng L-1 K L ' K L-1 K L-1 SG-12-snowpit 3619.00 336.39 18.55 43.83 55.40 102.90 346.57 142.79 974.02 1529.61 29.75 3677.70 426.67 SG-12-Fortuna 141.73 233.95 47.18 120.80 123.46 22.36 2.25 32.27 1205.99 1012.86 30.53 19.44 6.27 SG-12-Nordenskjold 103.38 239.25 8.51 28.17 67.19 54.00 2.10 14.94 5608.56 2491.59 116.83 11.64 21.46 TPG-12-1 2743.59 2131.15 113.35 269.37 588.19 129.70 376.44 518.50 4399.86 7928.98 149.84 55.53 105.51 DP-07-1 215.71 24.15 0.35 0.78 6.20 8.17 36.15 9.51 33.09 24.56 0.55 337.63 31.78 RICE 389.13 80.69 0.93 1.81 19.75 9.29 92.71 58.49 64.27 55.64 2.84 431.26 48.47 SPRESSO 22.24 296.04 0.50 0.86 30.12 14.70 7.76 4.31 34.67 82.23 2.48 7.89 6.76 ITASE-00-2 14.07 5.86 0.13 0.34 7.09 6.96 1.32 16.36 18.14 0.40 15.99 3.53 ITASE-01 -4 11.44 7.63 0.30 0.65 4.90 1.38 7.94 1.29 23.18 20.43 0.72 13.75 5.22 ITASE-02-1 17.12 11.89 0.28 0.45 15.94 1.27 8.99 2.24 18.59 38.48 2.64 24.95 4.41 ITASE-02-1 30.78 6.52 0.25 0.46 4.50 1.47 10.17 3.43 31.85 28.86 0.49 41.60 6.42 ITASE-02-5 13.46 7.25 0.30 0.60 2.27 17.32 2.46 17.55 19.52 0.37 18.01 1.80 ITASE-03-1 17.45 19.01 0.51 1.16 21.72 25.10 1.05 36.53 30.22 0.97 15.19 4.51 ITASE-03-1 16.73 18.19 0.51 1.15 20.93 25.93 0.95 35.10 29.60 0.99 14.63 4.49 ITASE-03-3 46.61 27.44 2.53 4.43 24.99 5.02 58.23 4.23 63.94 67.26 2.34 45.43 11.65 ITASE-06-2 19.59 6.36 0.80 1.85 6.06 2.44 18.38 3.38 66.31 15.95 0.86 19.03 2.76 ITASE-07-4 8.46 5.34 0.22 0.51 1.51 1.82 9.48 0.90 42.83 7.09 0.42 8.05 1.58 ITASE-07-5 10.93 5.12 0.41 0.88 3.28 1.05 12.71 2.53 59.73 12.41 0.89 10.72 2.77 Tasman Glacier 82.72 34.98 1.09 2.32 15.84 10.26 13.35 18.33 63.46 72.37 1.71 128.41 8.65 TPG-12-1 2743.59 2131.15 113.35 269.37 588.19 129.70 376.44 518.50 4399.86 7928.98 149.84 55.53 105.51 All data were collected by and analyzed by the Climate Change Institute. Mayewski and others: Initial reconnaissance for a South Ceorgia ice core 59 575000 675500 £76000 675000 675500 67S000 Fig. 7. Szielasko Glacier. The image is 1.6 km wide (east-west) and 2.5 km long (north-south). The black path represents the radar/GPS track performed on 18 October 2012 and the lowest elevation is marked as 'D'. The radar profile ABCDE was measured on the return track, and the corresponding radargram is shown in Figure 8. A maximum ice depth of 76 m was measured at point B. Source: Google Earth. materials and fuels) (Korotkikh and others, 2014), while mining in the Chilean Andes could explain the high Ba values for South Georgia. 3. RADIO ECHO SOUNDING AND GPS - METHODS AND RESULTS A portable impulse radar with a central frequency of 4 MHz was used with a transmitter to produce a pulse with an output voltage of 1600 V, a rise time of 100 ns and a pulse repetition frequency of 400 pulses s_1.The receiver is composed ofa Fluke PM97os-cilloscope connected to a portable PC that acts as a recording unit. Antennae with a half-dipole length of 20 m (A/4) were used in the field, equivalent to a wavelength (A) of 42 m in ice, assuming an electromagnetic wave velocity in temperate ice of 168 m us-1 (Blindow and others, 2010). Frequencies <30 MHz are especially adequate for temperate glaciers such as those found at lower elevations on South Georgia, since the presence of water bodies within the ice with a dimension on the order of several meters produces strong signal loss by scattering and absorption. The radar data were processed using the ReflexW program (K.J. Sandmeier software). A single freguency GPS receiver with C/A code and pseu-dorange was used for geolocation of the radar data and also for monitoring the surface elevation of the glacier. The GPS data were differentially processed with data from the IGS (International GNSS Service (http://igs.org/rts) stations Falkland Islands (FALK, located 1470 km to the west) and O'Higgins Station (OHIG, located 1580 km southwest in the Antarctic Peninsula) using the GrafNav software combined with the online Precise Point Positioning (PPP) solution of the Canadian Spatial Reference System (http://www.geod. nrcan.gc.ca/products-produits/ppp_e.php). The elevation accuracy of the data is 4 m. A 2 km north-south and south-north radar and GPS transect, with a similar return track (total 4 km), was completed on Szielasko Ice Cap on 18 October 2012 (Fig. 7). The Szielasko Glacier covers an area of 1.6 km2, with a total area of ~3 km2 including neighboring ice-covered areas, which is ~4% of the whole Barff Peninsula. Based on its size Szielasko is classified at present as a glacier, rather than an ice cap (Cogley and others, 2011). The maximum ice depth along the radar transect is 86 m. Figures 7 and 8 show a radar transect with a maximum ice Fig. 8. Radargram corresponding to the profile AA' shown in Figure 7. The left axis shows two-way travel time in ns, while the right axis is the equivalent ice depth in m. The horizontal scale is expressed as number of radar traces, and corresponds to a horizontal distance of 1460 m. The lower radargram is the same as the upper one, but with a red curve indicating the interpreted glacier bed. The maximum ice depth of profile AA' occurs at trace N°76 with 76 m (Figure 7). Downloaded from https:/www.cambridge.org/core. University of South Bohemia, on 15 Feb 2017 at 13:49:23, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https:/www.cambridge.org/core/terms . https://doi.org/! 0.1017/jog.2016.9 60 Mayewski and others: Initial reconnaissance for a South Ceorgia ice core -1 -I— 450 500 S50 600 650 700 750 Elevation (m) Fig. 9. Thinning rates (m) at Szielasko Glacier were obtained from CPS 18 October 2012 data and SRTM February 2000 1 arcsec data. Thinning rates are maximum at lower elevations and minimum at the highest elevations. thickness of 76 m. Ice thicknesses have a nominal accuracy of 5 m. These are the first reported ice thickness measurements of South Georgia, and will help to calibrate estimated ice depths (Cooper and others, 2010). For Szielasko Glacier, the estimated ice depth using a standard ice flow model based on SRTM surface elevations (Farr and others, 2007) is between 0 and 250 m, with a 50% confidence (Cooper and others, 2010). Comparison of our GPS data of 18 October 2012 with the 1 arcsecond (24.5 m horizontal resolution and vertical error of 8 m) SRTM elevation data of February 2000 allows us to derive elevation changes for Szielasko Glacier. The total elevation change error is the quadrature sum of the GPS and the STRM errors. The absolute elevation errors of the GPS and the SRTM data (at 90% probability level) are 4 and 8 m, respectively, so the quadrature error is 9 m. For an average thickness change over the area of Szielasko Glacier, the total error can be further divided by the square root of the number of GPS data points obtained (11 773 data points at a rate of 1 Hz), resulting in an elevation change error of 8 cm. An average thinning of 20.38 m was obtained for the 12.7 a period, equivalent to an average thinning rate of 1.6 m a-1. The thinning rate is maximum at lower elevations (4 m a-1 at 420 m) and minimum at higher elevations (~1 m a-1 at 700 m) (Fig. 9). Assuming a mean snow/firn density of 0.5 gem3 at Szielasko Glacier, a mass loss of 0.8 m w.e. a-1 is obtained, that is in the upper range of the global average of glacier mass loss (Zemp and others, 2015) for the first decade of the 21 st century, and the highest mass loss rate measured during the last 100 a. The large majority (97%) of glaciers in South Georgia have been retreating since at least 1938, with 15 glaciers having retreated >1 km, and Neumayer Glacier on the northeastern coast exhibiting the largest retreat in South Georgia; 4.4 km in the period 1957-2008 (Cook and others, 2010). This accelerated retreat is most probably a response to warmer air and sea surface temperatures with impacts on albedo, glacier calving and other ablation processes. At Grytviken, on the northeast coast of South Georgia, summer temperatures are nearly 2°C higher than in the 1930s (Cooper and others, 2010). If current glacier loss rates remain stable, peripheral low-elevation glaciers such as Szielasko would completely disappear within 50 a. Under future climate warming scenarios Downloaded from https:/www.cambridge.org/core. University of South Bohemia, on 15 Feb 2017 at 1 . https://doi.org/! 0.1017/jog.2016.9 glacier extinction could probably occur earlier. On the main icefield of South Georgia the highest elevations are close to 1000 m and reach 2935 m a.s.l. at Mount Paget. Considering that the large majority of glaciers are retreating on South Georgia, any potential snow accumulation increase related to warming and intensification of the westerlies, has likely been counterbalanced by enhanced ablation due to temperature increase at lower elevations. Therefore we should expect ongoing accelerated glacier loss over South Georgia in the future. 4. CONCLUSIONS Our data together with the inspection of climatological data suggest that a viable ice core climate record is available from South Georgia, particularly at elevations above 2000 m a.s.l. There exists a strong impetus for continuing the search for a well-preserved ice core site based on the following: (1) South Georgia is clearly in a region that is sensitive to and potentially severely impacted by changes in the position and strength of the westerlies; (2) glacier retreat in response to warming severely limits the availability of viable ice core recovery sites on South Georgia; (3) 'annual layering' could be preserved in old ice; (4) recent terrestrial dust (calcium) and seasalt (sodium) values suggest intensification of the westerly winds today relative to a snapshot in time tentatively assigned to the early Holocene; and (5) South Georgia glacio-chemical concentrations are very high relative to West Antarctic and Antarctic Peninsula ice core sites, and similar to ice core sites in the Chilean Andes and the New Zealand Alps, as might be expected based on latitude and proximity to terrestrial and anthropogenic sources. It is clear that an ice core sampling site well above 550 m (ideally above 2000 m), on the west side of the island (summer snowline ~300 m), far from exposed rock, is required to test the viability of a deeper ice core. Sites in the Kohl Plateau region at ~1000 m a.s.l. or the small ice caps above 2000 m a.s.l. are likely candidates. The highest sites are subjected to intense winds and therefore significant erosion that could cause major erosional disconformities in resulting ice core records. Further they require helicopter support to transport deep drilling equipment, that is, at present, not available for South Georgia. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We wish to thank the crew (Magnus Day, Kali Kahn, and Edd Hewitt) and owner Skip Novak of Pelagic Australis for their amazing support, the Kuli Foundation for their generous funding, the Government of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands for permission to work on South Georgia and for their remarkable oversight of the island, the Government of the Falkland Islands and the South Atlantic Environmental Research Institute in the Falkland Islands for their advice and support, the British Antarctic Survey for allowing use of their freezer at the King Edward Point Station, and for transporting our ice samples to the UK from which we could transport them to Maine, two anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments, W.M. Keck Foundation and the US National Science Foundation 1042883) for support and enhancement of the W.M. 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