Utility of 222Rn as a passive tracer of subglacial distributed system drainage

Détails

ID Serval
serval:BIB_40175A206D03
Type
Article: article d'un périodique ou d'un magazine.
Collection
Publications
Titre
Utility of 222Rn as a passive tracer of subglacial distributed system drainage
Périodique
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Auteur⸱e⸱s
Linhoff Benjamin S., Charette Matthew A., Nienow Peter W., Wadham Jemma L., Tedstone Andrew J., Cowton Thomas
ISSN
0012-821X
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
03/2017
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
462
Pages
180-188
Langue
anglais
Résumé
Water flow beneath the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) has been shown to include slow-inefficient (distributed) and fast-efficient (channelized) drainage systems, in response to meltwater delivery to the bed via both moulins and surface lake drainage. This partitioning between channelized and distributed drainage systems is difficult to quantify yet it plays an important role in bulk meltwater chemistry and glacial velocity, and thus subglacial erosion. Radon-222, which is continuously produced via the decay of 226Ra, accumulates in meltwater that has interacted with rock and sediment. Hence, elevated concentrations of 222Rn should be indicative of meltwater that has flowed through a distributed drainage system network. In the spring and summer of 2011 and 2012, we made hourly 222Rn measurements in the proglacial river of a large outlet glacier of the GrIS (Leverett Glacier, SW Greenland). Radon-222 activities were highest in the early melt season (10–15 dpm L−1), decreasing by a factor of 2–5 (3–5 dpm L−1) following the onset of widespread surface melt. Using a 222Rn mass balance model, we estimate that, on average, greater than 90% of the river 222Rn was sourced from distributed system meltwater. The distributed system 222Rn flux varied on diurnal, weekly, and seasonal time scales with highest fluxes generally occurring on the falling limb of the hydrograph and during expansion of the channelized drainage system. Using laboratory based estimates of distributed system 222Rn, the distributed system water flux generally ranged between 1–5% of the total proglacial river discharge for both seasons. This study provides a promising new method for hydrograph separation in glacial watersheds and for estimating the timing and magnitude of distributed system fluxes expelled at ice sheet margins.
Web of science
Open Access
Oui
Création de la notice
29/08/2024 10:03
Dernière modification de la notice
25/11/2024 16:48
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