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Creators/Authors contains: "Carn, Simon"

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  1. The Arctic is warming at almost four times the global rate. Cooling caused by anthropogenic aerosols has been estimated to offset sixty percent of greenhouse-gas-induced Arctic warming, 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 (watts per square meter)), suggesting that underestimating passive volcanic sulfur emissions has significant implications for anthropogenic-induced Arctic climate change. These data include sulfur isotopes of sulfate measurements from a Greenland ice core and volcanic gas measurements (CO2:S (carbon dioxide:sulfur) ratios) from various volcanoes and hot springs in Iceland. 
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