The SNOWISO project has gone beyond the state of the art by challenging the fundamental assumption by which ice core isotope records have been interpreted based on for the last 50 years. Through a combination of direct field observations, the collection of an extensive sample set, and targeted modeling, the SNOWISO project has established that post-depositional processes play a significant role in creating the climate signal recorded by the ice core water isotope record. To achieve this result, the SNOWISO project has developed and executed cutting-edge measurement campaigns on top of the Greenland and Antarctic Ice Sheet, to obtain directly quantifiable evidence of post-depositional processes and their role in driving the climate signal recorded in the ice core.
Specifically, the SNOWISO project has documented: 1) the existence of isotopic fractionation during snow sublimation based on direct observations, 2) that the isotopic signal of the original precipitated snow alters on daily time scale, 3) that using our understanding of the key driving processes we can explain up to 50% of the day to day variability, 4) through direct observations that post-depositional processes significantly alters the mean annual and seasonal isotope value, 5) that post-depositional processes are not only influencing the mean isotopic composition but also the inter-annual variability, and 6) that the influence of post-depositional processes on the isotope signal is varying spatially and temporally.