Ion geochemistry of a coastal ice wedge in northwestern Canada: Contributions from marine aerosols and implications for ice‐wedge paleoclimate interpretations

Abstract Ice wedges are a characteristic ground ice feature in permafrost regions that form primarily from the meltwater of the seasonal snowpack. Ice‐wedge oxygen and hydrogen stable isotopes have been used in winter paleotemperature reconstructions; however, until recently, the ion geochemistry of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Permafrost and Periglacial Processes
Main Authors: Holland, Kira M., Porter, Trevor J., Criscitiello, Alison S., Froese, Duane G.
Other Authors: Geological Society of America, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2023
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ppp.2184
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/ppp.2184
Description
Summary:Abstract Ice wedges are a characteristic ground ice feature in permafrost regions that form primarily from the meltwater of the seasonal snowpack. Ice‐wedge oxygen and hydrogen stable isotopes have been used in winter paleotemperature reconstructions; however, until recently, the ion geochemistry of ice wedges has rarely been analyzed as a potential paleoclimate proxy. This potential is greatest for ice wedges located in coastal regions, where marine aerosols are the dominant contributor to snowpack impurities. Here, we evaluate the source and integrity of ionic concentrations of a coastal ice wedge in the northwestern Canadian Arctic (Beaufort Sea coast) to evaluate the use of ice wedges as a marine aerosol archive. Comparison to a regionally comparable snowpack reveals remarkably similar ionic concentrations for Cl − , Na + , Br − , SO 4 2− , Ca 2+ , and Mg 2+ , with a Cl − /Na + ratio similar to bulk seawater (1.80 vs. 1.79 in seawater), suggesting that marine aerosols, probably from sea salt aerosol production during blowing snow events over sea ice as indicated by depleted SO 4 2− values relative to Na + , are probably the dominant contributor to ion concentrations. A previously established linear age model for the ice wedge is used to develop a continuous ion record spanning ~4,600 to ~700 yr b2k. Cl − and Na + concentrations reveal a strong and continuous increase in concentrations over the late Holocene, thought to be driven by reduced distance‐to‐coast of up to 1 km as a result of coastal erosion. This study presents a novel interpretation of ice‐wedge geochemical data and represents the first Holocene ice‐wedge ion record.