1. Introduction
Ice cores are incredible archives of paleoenvironmental data, containing crucial insights into past climate and supplementing and extending instrumental data (e.g. Schneider and Steig, Reference Schneider and Steig2008; Steig and others, Reference Steig, Schneider, Rutherford, Mann, Comiso and Shindell2009, Fegyveresi and others, Reference Fegyveresi2011). Data from ice cores are especially valuable because they provide multiple, independent constraints on the history of key climatic variables such as temperature or snow accumulation rates (e.g. Alley, Reference Alley2010; Cuffey and Paterson, Reference Cuffey and Paterson2010). Multiple ice-core proxies (e.g. stable isotopes, ice chemistry, etc.) have been used to develop indicators of past climates across multiple sites, and while these proxies are fairly well-established qualitatively, corroboration through independent data sets, as well as calibration of the geochemical paleo-thermometer, is invaluable for establishing robust and accurate paleoclimate reconstructions.
Spencer and others (Reference Spencer, Alley and Fitzpatrick2006) showed that estimates of past temperatures in polar ice can be quantitatively reconstructed from ice-core bubble number-density (BND) and site accumulation rates. Recent applications of this model employed for the West Antarctic Ice Sheet Divide site (Fegyveresi and others, Reference Fegyveresi2011, Reference Fegyveresi2016) validated the effectiveness and capability of this technique for establishing independent records down to the depth at which bubble loss to clathrate formation becomes significant, which in previous applications of the technique has been in Holocene ice. The use of this technique requires slow, labor-intensive bubble-section preparation and analyses.
Here, we present an independent paleoclimate reconstruction for South Pole across the most recent glacial termination, and up through the Holocene, using this BND paleoclimate indicator. We also present and compare data derived from a new three-dimensional (3-D) imaging technique developed using micro-CT technology. We show that using this new imaging technique instead of the traditional bubble-section imagery produces comparable results, with similar precision and uncertainty. In addition, this imaging technique is effectively nondestructive to the ice samples, and sample preparation and measurement is considerably more efficient, enabling faster and more-accurate future analyses.
Loss of bubbles to form clathrate hydrates in the South Pole core was insignificant in ice samples younger than ∼20 ka (ka bf 1950), allowing the results here to give the first independent temperature reconstruction from BND through the glacial transition. This new temperature reconstruction for South Pole agrees with other independently derived reconstructions of surface temperatures for the site based on isotope proxies, diffusion length estimates and firn densification modeling (Buizert and others, Reference Buizert2021a; Kahle and others, Reference Kahle2021).
2. Background
2.1. South Pole site specifics
The main coring of the South Pole Ice Coring Project (SPICEcore) took place over two Antarctic summer seasons between 2014 and 2016. The drilling site, located at 89.99° S, 98.16° W and ∼2 km from the primary South Pole Station, is unique in that the mean annual temperature at the drilling location (−49°C) is more typical of East Antarctic sites, while the mean accumulation rate (∼7.5 cm w.e. a−1) is more typical of West Antarctic sites (Casey and others, Reference Casey, Fudge, Neumann, Steig, Cavitte and Blankenship2014). The site has an estimated ice thickness of 2700 m, an ice velocity of 10 m a−1 along 40°W, is situated at ∼2835 m above sea level, and has an estimated depth to pore close-off of ∼120 m (Battle and others, Reference Battle1996, Casey and others, Reference Casey, Fudge, Neumann, Steig, Cavitte and Blankenship2014; Sneed and others, Reference Sneed, Mayewski and Dixon2011). The primary recovered core, SPC14, was drilled to a depth of 1751 m, with the ice dated to ∼54 300 years bp (Winski and others, Reference Winski2019). Calculated gas-age/ice-age differences for the core were as high as 2500 years, with gas-ages at the bottom of the core of ∼52 500 years bp (Epifanio and others, Reference Epifanio2020).
Several studies have been published recently reconstructing glaciological, chemical and temperature histories for the South Pole site using the primary SPC14 core. These include analyses of accumulation (Fudge and others, Reference Fudge2016; Kahle and others, Reference Kahle2021), advection and ice-provenance trends (Lilien and others, Reference Lilien2018; Fudge and others, Reference Fudge2020), oxygen isotope trends (Markle and others, Reference Markle, Steig, Roe, Winckler and McConnell2018; Steig and others, Reference Steig2021; Markle and Steig, Reference Markle and Steig2022) and trapped gas trends (Epifanio and others, Reference Epifanio2020; Morgan and others, Reference Morgan, Buizert, Fudge, Kawamura, Severinghaus and Trudinger2022; Epifanio and others, Reference Epifanio2023). The temperature reconstructions published thus far for the South Pole site have used several proxies, including the well-known water stable isotope thermometer (Markle and Steig, Reference Markle and Steig2022), isotope diffusion lengths (Kahle and others, Reference Kahle2021) and the history of firn densification at the site (Buizert and others, Reference Buizert2021a). These reconstructions for South Pole have all revealed a general temperature increase across the recent glacial transition of between ∼7°C and ∼10°C.
An investigation of the visual stratigraphy was also carried out for the site (Fegyveresi and others, Reference Fegyveresi, Fudge, Winski, Ferris and Alley2019a). Seasonal coarse-grained and depth-hoar layers were used to identify the annual layers (also see Gow, Reference Gow1965), and the results reveal accumulation trends that could indicate past climatological or glaciological changes at the site. Specifically, one 1600 year interval from 6700 to 5100 years bp (years bf 1950) experienced a higher-than-average accumulation rate (∼8.1 cm w.e. a−1), while one 700 year interval from 3100 to 2400 years bp (years bf 1950) experienced a lower-than-average accumulation rate (∼6.4 cm w.e. a−1); several analyses have suggested these temporal patterns in the core are related to upstream spatial patterns in accumulation and redistribution of snow (Winski and others, Reference Winski2021, Morgan and others, Reference Morgan, Buizert, Fudge, Kawamura, Severinghaus and Trudinger2022).
Over 1900 individual wind or iced crusts were also observed and documented, as well as one visible tephra layer at a depth of 306.6 m in the core (∼3560 years bp and likely tied to an eruption of Candlemas Island in the South Sandwich Islands; Palais and others, Reference Palais, Kyle, Mosley‐Thompson and Thomas1987). These data contributed to the accumulation-rate reconstruction that is needed in the BND temperature-reconstruction technique, and demonstrated, not surprisingly, that the core is ordinary bubbly ice suitable for that reconstruction.
2.2. BND paleothermometry
Even with the demonstrated success of known ice-core paleoclimate proxies (such as δ18Oice), it is essential that any such proxy or its associated reconstruction technique or model be continually tested, refined, and improved to ensure that they are spatially and temporally robust across sites with differing paleo-histories and conditions. It is also valuable to develop complementary paleoclimate reconstructions using methods reliant on entirely independent variables, so as to better corroborate those reconstructions and affirm that they represent the most accurate temperature histories. A recent study showed that borehole thermometry in interior East Antarctica yields Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) temperature estimates significantly warmer than those estimated from the traditional use of water stable isotope ratios (Buizert and others, Reference Buizert2021a), providing a need for independently calibrated temperature proxies to resolve this discrepancy.
Based on the modeling in Alley and Fitzpatrick (Reference Alley and Fitzpatrick1999), Spencer and others (Reference Spencer, Alley and Fitzpatrick2006) developed a technique that allows for the reconstruction of either paleotemperatures or paleo-accumulation rates by fitting a semiempirical steady-state model to measured number-densities of bubbles in ice cores. Polar firn densification is primarily driven by temperature and accumulation rate (Gow, Reference Gow1968); however, during burial following pore close-off, ice grain sizes quickly become unreliable indicators of firnification conditions due to various processes that depend on other factors such as ice deformation rate (Spencer and others, Reference Spencer, Alley and Fitzpatrick2006). Given that the geometry of firn at pore-close off is essentially self-similar (Gow, Reference Gow1968), the integrated effects of temperature and accumulation rate on density and grain growth are therefore recorded in the number-density of bubbles formed as the firn is transformed into ice at the pore close-off depth (Spencer and others, Reference Spencer, Alley and Creyts2001, Reference Spencer, Alley and Fitzpatrick2006). Furthermore, due to slow gas diffusion between ice-core bubbles, BNDs in ice can reliably preserve information about firnification conditions over longer periods (Alley and Fitzpatrick, Reference Alley and Fitzpatrick1999).
Conserved number-density then allows for the use of the firn-densification and grain-growth models to invert for either the firnification paleotemperature or paleo-accumulation rate, provided the other parameter is known. This method was updated and applied successfully using ice-core data from the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) Divide site, revealing an overall ∼1.7°C Holocene cooling—with notable smaller climatic trends contained therein—that also agreed with δ18O reconstructions (Fegyveresi and others, Reference Fegyveresi2011, Reference Fegyveresi2016).
As noted, the South Pole site experiences a unique combination of environmental variables for an Antarctic site, most notably its relatively high mean-annual accumulation rates for its relatively low mean-annual temperature (Casey and others, Reference Casey, Fudge, Neumann, Steig, Cavitte and Blankenship2014). Both of these site conditions favor slower grain growth with depth, and therefore smaller mean grain and bubble sizes, as well as higher BND values (Gow, Reference Gow1968). Combined with a higher-resolution annual stratigraphy as compared to other East Antarctic sites, it places South Pole into a ‘sweet spot’ with respect to BND, allowing for both a greater depth of resolvable annual layers, as well as the potential reconstruction of temperature histories back through the most-recent glacial termination into the Pleistocene (the Spencer model has not yet been successfully applied to any ice core containing bubbly ice older than Holocene-aged). It is worth noting that the South Pole site is located in a flank-flow setting, and therefore the climatic record from deeper in the core represents conditions from farther upglacier, introducing the need for ice-flow corrections to answer certain paleoclimatic questions, with the associated uncertainties in ice flow (Fudge and others, Reference Fudge2016; Lilien and others, Reference Lilien2018) .
During field recovery of the SPC14 core, it was also observed that the core exhibited very minimal brittle-ice behavior, even at brittle-ice zone (BIZ) depths traditionally associated with extreme instability, fracturing and spalling (Souney and others, Reference Souney2021; Fegyveresi and others, Reference Fegyveresi, Fudge, Winski, Ferris and Alley2019a). Later, inspection of thin sections prepared from the core also revealed a nearly complete lack of any chessboard subgrain structures, likely arising in large part from the small grain sizes which in turn are controlled by the high accumulation rate and low temperature of the site. Recent work by Fitzpatrick and others (Reference Fitzpatrick, Wilen, Voigt, Alley and Fegyveresi2024) and Barnett and others (Reference Barnett, Fegyveresi, Alley, Smith, Fitzpatrick and Voigt2023) suggests that brittle behavior involves fracturing along the chessboard subgrain boundaries. This diminished brittle-ice behavior has implications for site-selection for future ice cores. It also was extremely favorable for more continuous and accurate BND measurements, as bubble-section preparation was less affected by cracking during the ice cutting and microtoming processes, resulting in more-pristine (and defect-free) imagery.
Because of the higher BND counts, lack of overall brittleness and smaller grains, the South Pole core is excellent for both applying and refining the Spencer model, and for testing new measurement techniques and methods. As noted by Fegyveresi and others, (Reference Fegyveresi2011, Reference Fegyveresi2016), measurement of BND on bubble-sections introduces small uncertainties due to the two-dimensional (2-D) stereological projection of 3-D bubbles, which might be avoided with 3-D measurement techniques that capture true volumetric data and imagery, such as X-ray microtomography.
Over the past two decades, micro-computed tomography, or simply micro-CT, has been shown to be an effective tool for measuring 3-D properties of glacier ice without significant degradation to the sample (e.g. Hagenmuller and others, Reference Hagenmuller, Chambon, Lesaffre, Flin and Naaim2013; Dadic and others, Reference Dadic2019; Bagherzadeh and others, Reference Bagherzadeh, Freitag, Frese and Wilhelms2023). Micro-CT technology generates 3-D images composed of an integrated collection of 2-D projections, or ‘slices’, of the target specimen. At high enough resolution, this technique can therefore generate not just true 3-D counts of trapped bubbles in a given volume, but also volumetric size estimates of those bubbles. Here, we prepared 11 unique micro-CT samples at 100 m intervals (and from equivalent depths to those of traditional bubble-section sampling) as a way to test the efficacy and accuracy of the technology for measuring BND and mean bubble sizes. Our primary objective was to determine if this technique could be used as a viable alternative for ascertaining bubble counts, and ultimately, BND. We show that this new technique is viable and indeed nondestructive of the prepared samples, and can greatly reduce sample preparation and imaging processing time for future ice-core measurements.
3. Methods and data
3.1. Bubble number-density
To obtain both the ice-core bubble-sections and micro-CT sections, samples were first cut from the appropriate core depth sections in the National Science Foundation Ice Core Facility’s −26°C ice preparation room. Following Fegyveresi and others (Reference Fegyveresi2011, Reference Fegyveresi2016), we used a band saw to first cut thick bubble sections ∼10 cm long by ∼6 cm wide by 5 mm thick, at 20 m depth intervals ranging from 160 to 1200 m depth in the core. One face of each sample was smoothed with a sledge-type microtome and then affixed to a glass slide using a combination of silicone oil and tinkered water-ice. These samples were then microtomed to ∼1.5 mm overall thickness and recorded with several overlapping high-resolution images using the on-site digital camera stage. Final imagery was stitched using Adobe Photoshop software to produce the high-resolution bubble-sections (e.g. Fig. 1). Estimates of BND were calculated—with appropriate bubble-cut corrections—following Fegyveresi and others (Reference Fegyveresi2011, Reference Fegyveresi2016), and using the QIA-64 (formerly Fovea Pro) image analysis plug-in for Adobe Photoshop.

Figure 1. An unedited bubble-section image from the 160 m vertically oriented sample (just below pore close-off). Image shown with scale and stratigraphic core orientation.
Micro-CT samples were cut at 100 m intervals ranging from 200 to 1200 m depth. These samples measured 2.5 cm square, by 8 cm long and were split in half for replicate measurements. All micro-CT measurements were made on site in a − 10°C cold room at the Cold Regions Research and Engineering Lab in Hanover, NH. We used a Bruker SkyScan 1173 desktop micro-CT scanner with a Hamamatsu 130/300 tungsten X-ray source and flat-panel sensor camera detector, with samples mounted in standard plastic measurement containers (see, e.g. Fig. 2). The X-ray source of the SkyScan 1173 produces a fixed conical, polychromatic beam that operates a distortion-free X-ray detector with a source spot size of <5 µm, a spatial resolution detectability of <4 µm, and contrast resolution of <7 µm. For our measurements, we set the maximum accelerating voltage of the X-ray beam at 40 kV, with a current of 200 μA. Samples were rotated 180° in 0.35° steps, with five-frame averaged attenuation images captured at each step using a camera exposure of 400 ms. We used a 2 × 2 binning protocol to create final X-ray radiographs of 1120 × 1120 pixels. Reconstructions and analyses of these radiographs were carried out use the native Bruker software package NRECON, which uses a modified Feldkamp cone-beam algorithm to produce a vertical stack of gray-scale cross-section images. As part of the image post-processing, we performed ring artifact reduction, post-alignment and beam hardening corrections, and a two-pixel Gaussian kernel smoothing to reduce noise. The resulting images had a spatial resolution of 15 μm per voxel (e.g. Fig. 3). We selected a smaller internal volume of interest for analyses, measuring ∼10 000 mm3, in order to eliminate sample edge effects and gaps. We performed 3-D analyses on the resulting segmented images using Skycan CTAn software. Standard binary thresholding and 5-voxel despeckling algorithms were first applied to reduce image noise and eliminate non-bubble defects. Final returned data included all measured feature (bubble) counts and sizes. Overall measurement errors reflect a combination of analytical instrument uncertainty and the one sigma (1σ) standard of replicate samples.

Figure 2. Bruker SkyScan 1173 X-ray micro-CT instrument located in a −10°C cold room at the Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory. Scanner shown with a sample mounted in plastic specimen container on the measurement stage.

Figure 3. A volumetric 3-D rendering of micro-CT imagery for the sample taken from 300 m depth. Each small feature represents a bubble measured within the sample volume of interest.
BND is the number of bubble centers in a given volume of ice, but because of the finite size of bubbles, parts of some bubbles with centers outside of a sample will be observed in a sample. Standard correction methods have been developed for these ‘cut bubbles’, and were followed here (see Saltykov, Reference Saltykov1976; Martinerie and others, Reference Martinerie, Lipenkov and Raynaud1990; Fegyveresi and others, Reference Fegyveresi2011). We also followed Lipenkov (Reference Lipenkov and Hondoh2000) and Ueltzhoffer and others (Reference Ueltzhöffer2010) in identifying and eliminating any ‘microbubbles’ from our bubble counts. In ice from especially cold sites such as South Pole, microbubbles can account for up to 20% of total observed bubbles (Lipenkov, Reference Lipenkov and Hondoh2000), although in our measured samples, they were never >5%. Consequently, the highest concentration of microbubbles we eliminated in any of our samples was 5% of the total bubble count, and errors in identification are a small fraction of that. Similar to WAIS Divide (Fegyveresi and others, Reference Fegyveresi2016), for the purpose of using BND as a climate indicator, this small concentration was negligible.
We measured BND using the bubble-sections and micro-CT samples, with typical values ranging between 800 and 900 bubbles cm−3 over the clathrate-free portion of our sampling interval—with a maximum value of 938 bubbles cm−3 measured at depth of 500 m (Fig. 4). These number-densities are notably higher than published values from other ice-core sites (see, e.g. Spencer and others, Reference Spencer, Alley and Fitzpatrick2006; Fegyveresi and others, Reference Fegyveresi2011), reflecting the combined effects of the relative colder mean temperatures, and higher mean accumulation rates at South Pole. The onset of clathrates did begin to notably affect our data below ∼1100 m, so for the purposes of our paleoclimate reconstruction, modeled temperatures from below this depth were considered unreliable. The glacial–interglacial transition, occurring between ∼1100 and 800 m in depth, is not immediately obvious in the raw BND data. This is because the colder temperatures and lower accumulation rates during glacial periods have opposite effects on BND.

Figure 4. Measured bubble number-densities plotted against depth. Error bars represent estimated mean bubble count error across all samples. The clathrate-ice zone is shown in gray.
3.2. Accumulation-rate history
As noted above, reconstruction of paleotemperatures from BND data requires paleo-accumulation rates. Here, we describe our accumulation history after a short review of earlier work illustrating important characteristics of the site.
Beginning in 1965, several shallow firn and ice cores were drilled near South Pole Station (e.g. Gow, Reference Gow1965; Giovinetto and Schwerdtfeger, Reference Giovinetto and Schwerdtfeger1965; Kuivinen, Reference Kuivinen1983; Mosley-Thompson and others, Reference Mosley-Thompson, Paskievitch, Gow and Thompson1999), each resulting in slightly different modern mean accumulation-rate estimates, ranging between 5.0 and 8.5 cm w.e. a−1 (see also van der Veen and others, Reference Van der Veen, Mosley-Thompson, Gow and Mark1999; Casey and others, Reference Casey, Fudge, Neumann, Steig, Cavitte and Blankenship2014). During the 2002–03 field season, the International Trans-Antarctic Scientific Expedition (ITASE) drilled a 207 m core ∼8 km from the South Pole Station as part of their array of Antarctic cores. Visual stratigraphy was measured on this core in the field, yielding an accumulation rate of ∼7.6 cm w.e. a−1 when averaged over the 207 m (A. Gow, pers. comm., 2015; Sneed and others, Reference Sneed, Mayewski and Dixon2011). The most recent estimate of modern mean-accumulation rate derived from the SPC14 core is ∼7.4 cm w.e. a−1, ranging between ∼7.0 and ∼9.0 cm w.e. a−1 through the Holocene (Fegyveresi and others, Reference Fegyveresi, Fudge, Winski, Ferris and Alley2019a; Winski and others, Reference Winski2019).
Because the South Pole site is in a region of flank flow (not on an ice divide), with notable uncertainties in flow velocities over the history of accumulation of the ice in the core, the origin of measured accumulation can be somewhat complicated (Casey and others, Reference Casey, Fudge, Neumann, Steig, Cavitte and Blankenship2014; Lilien and others, Reference Lilien2018). Estimated regional ice-flow velocities for South Pole range between 9.6 and ∼10.1 m a−1 (Hamilton Reference Hamilton2004; Bamber and others Reference Bamber, Vaughan and Joughin2000), and therefore the provenance of any measured ice from deep within recovered cores at the site, is likely hundreds of kilometers upstream and sourced from a very large total catchment area.
Deeper layers in the SPC14 ice core were deposited upstream of the current coring location; therefore, the effective accumulation rate (A) in the core reflects both past climatic changes and upstream patterns of snow accumulation (Lilien and others, Reference Lilien2018; Fudge and others, Reference Fudge2020). Variations in the latter appear well-correlated with the surface curvature, or second derivative of the surface elevation, along the flow path, suggesting a role of surface snow redistribution by katabatic winds (Morgan and others, Reference Morgan, Buizert, Fudge, Kawamura, Severinghaus and Trudinger2022). The SPC14 (A) history has been reconstructed in various ways. Winski and others (Reference Winski2019) reconstructed Holocene accumulation rates based on annual layer thickness and a simple 1D Nye ice flow model (Nye, Reference Nye1963). The advantage of this method is that it allows high temporal resolution; however, it relies on a simplified and somewhat poorly constrained ice-flow model. Kahle and others (Reference Kahle2021) used a statistical inverse approach to simultaneously reconstruct a number of glacio-climatological parameters (A, T, thinning function) using empirical reconstructions of the water isotope diffusion length and the gas age-ice age difference (Δage). The advantage of this approach is that it covers the full length of the ice core; however, the method is not optimized for reconstructing past A, and it does not incorporate firn thickness information available from the isotopic composition of N2 (δ15N-N2). Here we use an empirical method to reconstruct A based on its fundamental relationship to firn thickness and firn age (Buizert, Reference Buizert2021b). Vertical gas diffusion within the firn pore network effectively stops at the lock-in depth L. At this depth, the gravitational isotopic enrichment of gases (such as δ15N-N2) halts, and the Δage is fixed (Sowers and others, Reference Sowers, Bender, Raynaud and Korotkevich1992). The ice-equivalent lock-in depth (L IE) gives the amount of ice (in meters) above L, and is given by
\begin{equation}{L_{{\text{IE}}}} = \int \limits_0^L \rho \left( z \right)/{\rho _{{\text{ice}}}}dz\end{equation} Over a wide range of climatic conditions, the ratio
${L_{{\text{IE}}}}/L$ is constant and ∼0.7 (Parrenin and others, Reference Parrenin2012). Presently at South Pole, this ratio is 0.712 (Vandecrux and others, Reference Vandecrux2023). The SPC accumulation rate is therefore given by
\begin{equation}A = \,\frac{{{L_{{\text{IE}}}}}}{{{\Delta \text{age}}}} = \frac{L}{{0.712 \times {\Delta \text{age}}}}\end{equation} For SPC, the Δage has been empirically reconstructed by combining volcanic synchronization of the ice ages, and methane synchronization of the gas ages to the WAIS Divide ice core that has an accurate layer-counted chronology and a small Δage (Buizert and others, Reference Buizert2015; Epifanio and others, Reference Epifanio2020; Sigl and others, Reference Sigl2016). In our reconstruction, we add 25 years to the published empirical Δage values to account for the diffusive age of the gases and thereby estimate the true ice age of lock-in (Buizert and others, Reference Buizert, Sowers and Blunier2013). Past L is reconstructed directly from the SPC δ15N data using the barometric equation (Sowers and others, Reference Sowers, Bender, Raynaud and Korotkevich1992), where we apply a cubic spline for smoothness and assume a constant 4 m convective zone thickness. We use standard error propagation techniques to estimate the uncertainty in A from the uncertainties in the empirical Δage (Epifanio and others, Reference Epifanio2020) and in L (set to 5 m). The resulting (1σ) uncertainty ranges from 5% to 15% of A. The A values reconstructed in this manner do not reflect the instantaneous values, but rather the values averaged over a time period corresponding the lifetime of the firn layer (ice equivalent, Δage). For the purpose of interpreting BNDs with respect to paleo-temperatures, this is actually the more meaningful parameter. Our accumulation record is shown in Fig. 5. Errors bars represent a root-mean-square (RMS) combination of the calculated gas-age/ice-age (Δage), and lock-in depth (
${L_{{\text{IE}}}}$) uncertainties.

Figure 5. Firn-averaged accumulation (A) history (cm ice a−1) for the South Pole site shown with combined uncertainty bands (gray) and discrete bubble number-density sampling depths (red). Published modern mean accumulation estimates are shown in ice-equivalent values.
4. Results and discussion
Paleotemperature reconstructions were calculated using the model developed by Spencer and others (Reference Spencer, Alley and Fitzpatrick2006) and incorporating the firn thickness accumulation record derived from the isotopic composition of N2 (δ15N-N2). We used the most recent dating of the SPC14 core that is based on volcanic electrochemical machining sulfate matching to the WAIS Divide core, together with annually resolved chemistry and visual stratigraphy (Winski and others, Reference Winski2019), to convert sample depths to equivalent ages. This depth-age scale reveals that our samples do capture the entirety of the glacial–interglacial transition above the depth of clathrate-dominated ice (which affected our samples aged > ∼20 ka (ka bf 1950).
The published BND model of Spencer and others (Reference Spencer, Alley and Fitzpatrick2006) uses a bubble-per-grain ratio at close-off of G = 2.02 ± 0.08, from a best fit to a suite of 15 data sets from sites with different temperatures and accumulation rates in Greenland and Antarctica. Some of the variability in their best-fit relation may arise from site-specific depositional effects, impurity effects, or influences of different ice-flow strain rates. None of these effects are large in the original study, and the technique yields useful results with the general multisite calibration; however, a site-specific calibration can largely remove any of these not-yet-quantified effects. The small difference between site-specific calibrations and the multisite calibration means that any time-evolution of the site-specific part of the calibration has a very small effect. Given the unique conditions for South Pole, including flank flow and uncertain history of ice-flow velocities, we conducted a detailed study of targeted samples across the South Pole pore close-off depth (∼120 m) to determine a site-specific bubble-per-grain ratio, yielding a value of G = 1.51 ± 0.05. While this value does not fall within the original study’s published uncertainties, we feel this can be explained by the unique combination of site conditions for South Pole. This lower site-specific value of G serves primarily to shift the mean temperature of the reconstruction to more closely match estimated modern temperature at the site, with little effect on the calculated magnitude of temperature changes.
The resultant reconstruction using both the traditional bubble-section imagery and the micro-CT derived imagery reveals a warming across the late glacial–interglacial transition of ∼7.5°C ± 0.87°C (Fig. 6). For each sample in the study, an integrated paleotemperature (representing the average temperature over the firnification time) was therefore determined using the measured BND, average accumulation rate for firnification time of the sample, and the steady-state model values of Spencer and others (Reference Spencer, Alley and Fitzpatrick2006). Combined error from the updated locally tuned model, the average accumulation rates, and estimated (RMS) mean bubble counting error of BND across our 53 traditional bubble-section samples (±17 bubbles cm−3), gives an average temperature error of ±0.85°C. Combined error across our 11 micro-CT samples (±14 bubbles cm−3) gives an average temperature error of ±0.89°C. These results support the use of 3-D micro-CT imagery in place of traditional bubble-section techniques as this approach more easily produced comparable temperature reconstructions with similar measures of uncertainty. Comparing the new empirical BND temperature estimate with water stable isotopes in the core implies an isotope-temperature regression slope of 0.97 ‰ °C–1 for δ18Oice for the LGM-preindustrial difference.

Figure 6. Past temperatures at the South Pole site, calculated from measured bubble number-density and accumulation rates. Horizontal ‘error’ bars represent the firnification time for each sample, and vertical error bars are the combined analytical errors, as described in the text. A LOESS smoothing line is shown to highlight major trends.
We observed other noteworthy trends in our paleoclimate reconstruction. Our data reveal a relatively stable site temperature history through the Holocene at South Pole, with only a slight (<0.5°C) total warming—though with an upstream correction for deposition elevation the climatic temperature trend would be smaller or might disappear. This observation is consistent with several other published values for East Antarctic sites (e.g. Ciais and others, Reference Ciais, Jouzel, Petit, Lipenkov and White1994; Stenni and others, Reference Stenni2004). Additionally, our data capture a clear Antarctic Cold Reversal (ACR) trend that closely matches the published timing estimates for a composite of six Antarctic sites by Pedro and others (Reference Pedro2011), falling between their earliest ACR onset (14.80 ± 0.20 ka bf 1950) and latest ACR termination (13.02 ± 0.20 ka bf 1950). Lastly, and similar to our observations from WAIS Divide, the onset of clathrates became clear in samples below ∼1100 m (aged > ∼20 ka), and we therefore do not show those reconstructed paleotemperatures. Clathrates were observed in bubble-section samples in very small numbers as shallow as ∼800 m, but were only abundant below ∼1100 m, and therefore the presence of these clathrates did not significantly affect our analyses or reconstructions in shallower samples.
A decrease in accumulation rate often results from a decrease in temperature through dependence on the saturation vapor pressure, at ∼7%°C–1 (Denton and others, Reference Denton, Alley, Comer and Broecker2005; Banta and others, Reference Banta, McConnell, Frey, Bales and Taylor2008; Frieler and others, Reference Frieler2015). The linear regression observed in our South Pole data yields a relationship of ∼13%°C−1 (R 2 = 0.88), however using log-scaled accumulation rates and the recently published methods by Nicola and others (Reference Nicola, Notz and Winkelmann2023), a regression yields 11%°C−1 (R 2 = 0.92; Fig. 7). This reveals a dependence greater than for thermodynamic control alone, suggesting contributions from dynamic processes, synoptic weather patterns, or changing ice sheet surface slopes. These values are consistent with the recent model-based studies that suggest a higher value (>10%°C−1) in the Antarctic interior (Nicola and others, Reference Nicola, Notz and Winkelmann2023).

Figure 7. Estimates of log-scaled accumulation rates (cm ice a−1) against the combined reconstructed temperatures (°C). Linear regression (with 95% confidence bands) yields a ∼11% increase in accumulation rate per °C warming (R 2 = 0.92).
Our modeled temperature history is consistent with other independent reconstructions for the site. As detailed above, our model estimates temperatures based on BND measurements from discrete depths in the core that are integrated over their respective pore close-off firn thicknesses, and corrected only for the effects of thinning. These estimates therefore represent temperatures during the time and at the place that the sample was in firn, such that older samples record conditions from farther upglacier. Temperature estimates reported by Buizert and others (Reference Buizert2021a), and Kahle and others (Reference Kahle2021) include data that are similarly uncorrected for upstream ice advection and therefore are used here for direct comparison.
Buizert and others (Reference Buizert2021a) specifically distinguish three temperatures in their study: climatic temperature (T CLIM), surface temperature (T S) and vapor condensation temperature (T C). In their study, they empirically reconstruct surface temperatures (T S) by using either the isotopic composition of N2 (δ15N-N2) and empirically reconstructed Δage as noted above, or by inverting measured borehole temperatures. Upper and lower bounds of their reconstructed paleotemperatures reflect a Monte-Carlo estimation of the uncertainty in the method reflecting: (1) the firn densification model tuning and (2) the analytical uncertainty in the data used (δ15N-N2 and empirical delta-age). As they reconstruct site temperature (TS), their data are therefore comparable to our site temperatures estimated here. Data from Buizert and others (Reference Buizert2021a), with published uncertainties, are shown for comparison to our data in Fig. 8a. In their study, they found a glacial–interglacial temperature difference at the South Pole site (reported as a cooling of the LGM as compared to the preindustrial period), to be 6.1°C ± 1.5°C consistent with an isotope scaling of 1.19 ‰ K−1. Our estimate of ∼7.5°C ± 0.87°C falls within the uncertainty bounds of their estimate.

Figure 8. Modeled BND past temperatures at the South Pole site (from Figure 6) shown in panel (a) compared to surface temperatures (TS) from Buizert and others (Reference Buizert2021a)—derived from the isotopic composition of N2 (δ15N-N2), and in panel (b) compared to surface temperatures from Kahle and others (Reference Kahle2021) – derived from δ18o stable isotopes (0.99 ± 0.03 ‰°C−1 scaling), and destrained to correct for ice thinning.
Kahle and others (Reference Kahle2021) use a novel approach to combine isotope diffusion length and other data sets from the SPC14 core to constrain temperature, accumulation-rate, and ice-thinning histories to estimated paleo-temperatures for South Pole. Their approach reveals a best-fit linear calibration between δ18O and the mean of their reconstruction using a scaling of 0.99 ± 0.03 ‰°C−1 (2σ). Their published reconstruction using this best-fit calibration, and destrained to correct for ice thinning, is shown for comparison in Fig. 8b. In their work, Kahle and others (Reference Kahle2021) note that while they used a diffusion length determined from the δ18O power spectrum in the reconstruction, they did not use absolute δ18O values. As such, their results serve as a truly independent calibration of the traditional water-isotope thermometer, and as an excellent reconstruction for comparison here. Most notably, their site temperature reconstruction gives a glacial–interglacial temperature change at the South Pole site of 6.65 ± 0.96°C (1σ). Similar to the Buizert and others’ (Reference Buizert2021a) reconstruction noted above, our estimate of ∼7.5°C ± 0.87°C also falls within the uncertainty bounds of this estimate.
The close agreement among the three histories is consistent with δ18O providing a useful quantitative record of surface temperature and validates the use of BND as an independent measure of paleotemperatures. All three independent methods find temporal isotope sensitivities of ∼ 1 ‰ °C–1 or greater, which is larger than the spatial regression slope of ∼0.8 ‰ °C–1 (Masson-Delmotte and others Reference Masson-Delmotte2008). We therefore conclude that the spatial regression slope method, as commonly used in Antarctic temperature reconstruction, overestimates the magnitude of glacial–interglacial temperature change at South Pole and possibly other locations.
Simple calculations using published ice velocities (∼3–10 m a−1) for South Pole (Lilien and others Reference Lilien2018) as well as estimates of surface slope (∼0.0015) and dry adiabatic lapse rates (∼10°C km−1) indicate that almost all of the change in observed temperature across the transition is likely climatic, and not due to advection. Similar advection-corrected estimates were calculated by Kahle and others (Reference Kahle2021) and found that upstream advection may account for at most, ∼1°C of the measured difference temperature change across the transition.
Our results here also show that micro-CT measurements are comparable to those acquired through traditional methods, and therefore are appropriate for other ice-core derived estimates or reconstructions. Sample preparation and measurement via tomography is effectively nondestructive allowing for multiple and/or subsequent sample measurements. Traditional bubble-section preparation comes at the expense of significant ice loss through the microtoming process, and the resultant samples are limited to bubble-section analyses. Samples prepared for micro-CT measurement could be scanned multiple times and even repurposed for other co-registered physical, chemical, isotopic, or gas measurements. The micro-CT also allows bubble shape measurements, which may help in future studies following Fegyveresi and others (Reference Fegyveresi, Alley, Voigt, Fitzpatrick and Wilen2019b) in use of bubbles as strain indicators.
Not only did the South Pole site allow the first successful implementation of the Spencer model across the glacial/interglacial transition, it also almost entirely avoids the difficulties posed by brittle ice. The South Pole Ice Core was remarkably stable upon recovery, exhibiting very minimal brittle-ice behavior. A subtle ‘BIZ’ was present within the SPC14 core within the depth interval of ∼620–1080; however, the ice did not exhibit the typical brittle hallmarks upon recovery such as extreme cracking or spalling. (Souney and others Reference Souney2021; Barnett and others, Reference Barnett, Fegyveresi, Alley, Smith, Fitzpatrick and Voigt2023). This notable lack of brittleness is most likely attributable to the unique site characteristics at South Pole, rather than the drilling and core handling procedures (Souney and others, Reference Souney2021).
As noted above, Barnett and others (Reference Barnett, Fegyveresi, Alley, Smith, Fitzpatrick and Voigt2023) and Fitzpatrick and others (Reference Fitzpatrick, Wilen, Voigt, Alley and Fegyveresi2024) found that brittle-ice behavior is likely connected to fractures following chessboard subgrain boundaries within the ice, which are favored by large bubble and grain sizes. Consequently, at sites with small mean grain sizes and high BNDs such as South Pole, this may explain the observed lack of brittle-ice behavior. Given the minimal brittle behavior of the South Pole Ice core, it was an ideal candidate for the testing of the new micro-CT bubble measurements we present here, as the majority of our samples were intact and/or defect free.
5. Conclusions and future work
We applied the ice-core BND paleoclimate model developed by Spencer and others (Reference Spencer, Alley and Fitzpatrick2006) to new samples recovered from the South Pole Ice Core (SPC14), and found ∼7.5°C ± 0.87°C warming from ∼19.5 ka to the present from samples measured in the upper 1200 m of the core. This is the first successful application of this independent paleoclimate model across the most recent glacial/interglacial transition, made possible in large part by the minimal presence of brittle ice and the depth of significant clathrate onset (below ∼1100 m). The data show a relatively stable Holocene (<0.5°C of warming) and a clear ACR signal (between ∼15 and 13 ka). These findings agree closely with other published independent reconstructions for South Pole based on stable isotope measurements (δ15N and δ18O), as well as published results from other East Antarctic sites (e.g. EPICA Dome C). Accumulation rate and modeled temperature varied together across our data sets (∼11%°C–1), suggesting contributions from dynamic processes, synoptic weather patterns, or changing ice sheet surface slopes.
We also show that using 3-D micro-CT imaging is a highly effective and comparable tool for measuring BND in core samples, and significantly reduces sample processing time when compared to traditional bubble-section techniques. This new method is also nondestructive to samples, preserving them for additional future analyses. Future analyses of bubble shape data, such as elongation orientation and aspect ratio, are planned in order to expand the work by Fegyveresi and others (Reference Fegyveresi, Alley, Voigt, Fitzpatrick and Wilen2019b). We note that there currently does not exist any technique for capturing hybrid grain/bubble analyses in 3-D through micro-CT (or c-axis measurements); however, new methods are being continually developed that may further the potential for more expanded ice-core physical properties measurements.
Data availability statement
All data presented here are available through the request of the corresponding author, or via download from USAP-DC (10.15784/601880; Fegyveresi, Reference Fegyveresi2025)
Acknowledgements
We acknowledge the following funding sources for support of this work: US National Science Foundation Division of Polar Programs grants 1542778, 1141839, 2315928 and 2218402. We also acknowledge Curt Labombard, Richard Nunn, and the staff of the National Science Foundation Ice Core Facility (NSF-ICF) in Denver, Colorado, as well as the South Pole Ice Core Coordination Office at the University of New Hampshire, and the Ice Drilling Design and Operations group at the University of Wisconsin. We thank numerous colleagues involved with the South Pole project, especially Eric Steig, Brad Markle, and Joe Souney. We thank all of the SPICEcore science technicians and core handlers for sample recovery. We also thank Samantha Barnett for assistance with the processing and interpretation of the bubble characterization data. Lastly, we thank our anonymous reviewers, whose thoughtful suggestions and questions served to clarify and improve this manuscript. Any use of trade, firm, or product names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement.
Competing interests
The author(s) declare none.







