“…It was suggested that the observed low temporal δ/ T may reflect a strong gradient between condensation and surface temperature in winter (Ekaykin et al, ; Landais, Ekaykin, et al, ) and/or the vanishing inversion layer in summer (Landais et al, ). In the central Antarctic Plateau with very low snow accumulation rates (0.016–0.038 m/w.e.a; Ekaykin et al, ; Hou et al, ; Jouzel et al, ; Masson et al, ; Watanabe et al, ), postdepositional processes could significantly modify the isotopic composition of surface snow (Casado et al, ; Laepple et al, ; Münch et al, ; Ritter et al, ). Recent observations in the summer have revealed that the isotopic composition of surface snow in the absence of precipitation varies with changes of the surface vapor isotopic composition (Casado et al, , ; Ritter et al, ; Steen‐Larsen, Masson‐Delmotte, et al, ; Touzeau et al, ), suggesting possible isotopic exchange between surface snow and atmospheric water vapor in the polar regions.…”