https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2022GL102061

*Authors*
U. A. Jongebloed, A. J. Schauer, J. Cole-Dai, C. G. Larrick, R. Wood, T. P.
Fischer, S. A. Carn, S. Salimi, S. R. Edouard, S. Zhai, L. Geng, B.
Alexander

First published: *02 January 2023*

https://doi.org/10.1029/2022GL102061

*Abstract*
The Arctic is warming at almost four times the global rate. An estimated
sixty percent of greenhouse-gas-induced Arctic warming has been offset by
anthropogenic aerosols, but the contribution of aerosols to radiative
forcing (RF) represents the largest uncertainty in estimating total RF,
largely due to unknown preindustrial aerosol abundance. Here, sulfur
isotope measurements in a Greenland ice core show that passive volcanic
degassing contributes up to 66 ± 10% of preindustrial ice core sulfate in
years without major eruptions. A state-of-the-art model indicates passive
volcanic sulfur emissions influencing the Arctic are underestimated by up
to a factor of three, possibly because many volcanic inventories do not
include hydrogen sulfide emissions. Higher preindustrial volcanic sulfur
emissions reduce modeled anthropogenic Arctic aerosol cooling by up to a
factor of two (+0.11 to +0.29 W m−2), suggesting that underestimating
passive volcanic sulfur emissions has significant implications for
anthropogenic-induced Arctic climate change.

*Key Points*
Sulfur isotopes in a Greenland ice core show that passive volcanic
degassing contributes 66% of preindustrial Arctic sulfate

The volcanic inventory used by most climate models underestimates passive
degassing, possibly due to missing hydrogen sulfide emissions

Elevated preindustrial passive volcanic degassing reduces the estimated
cooling effect of anthropogenic sulfate in the Arctic

*Plain Language Summary*
Sulfate aerosols are particles in the atmosphere that have a net cooling
effect on the climate. One of the most uncertain aspects of climate
modeling is the abundance of sulfate aerosols during the preindustrial era.
Without knowing the amount of sulfate aerosols during the preindustrial, it
is difficult to estimate how much anthropogenic sulfate aerosols have
offset warming from anthropogenic greenhouse gases. In this study, we
examine preindustrial sulfate aerosols in a Greenland ice core. We find
that sulfate aerosols from passive (i.e., non-eruptive) volcanic degassing
contribute almost two thirds of preindustrial Arctic sulfate aerosols in
years without major volcanic eruptions. We compare this result to a
state-of-the-art global model and find that most climate models use a
volcanic emissions inventory that underestimates preindustrial passive
volcanic sulfur emissions. That volcanic inventory only includes one type
of sulfur emission (sulfur dioxide), but studies have shown that volcanoes
emit hydrogen sulfide, which can also form sulfate aerosols. We show that
higher emissions of volcanic sulfur during the preindustrial era decrease
the estimated cooling effect of anthropogenic aerosols during the
industrial era. Thus, the underestimate of preindustrial volcanic emissions
in current climate models has significant implications for anthropogenic
climate change in the Arctic.

*Source: AGU Advancing Earth and Space Science *

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