Cf. Boutron et al., CHANGES IN CADMIUM CONCENTRATIONS IN ANTARCTIC ICE AND SNOW DURING THE PAST 155,000 YEARS, Earth and planetary science letters, 117(3-4), 1993, pp. 431-441
Changes in Cd concentrations in Antarctic ice and snow during the last
full climatic cycle (the past 155,000 yrs) have been investigated by
analysing various sections of the Dome C and Vostok deep Antarctic ice
cores and several blocks of recent Antarctic snow. Each sample was me
chanically decontaminated using ultraclean procedures and then analyse
d for Cd by the new ultrasensitive laser excited atomic fluorescence t
echnique. Cd concentrations are found to have been highly variable in
ancient Antarctic ice and therefore in the past pristine south polar a
tmosphere during the last climatic cycle, the highest values being obs
erved during the cold terminal stages of the last and next to last ice
ages. Concentrations measured in recent Antarctic snows are comparabl
e with those in Antarctic Holocene ice several thousand years old, whi
ch suggests that the anthropogenic influence is probably still negligi
ble for this heavy metal in the south polar atmosphere. For some of th
e samples, measured Cd concentrations can be simply accounted for by r
ock and soil dust and volcanic emissions, while for others there is a
significant excess over the contributions from these two sources.