Evaporation and water sourcing dominate lake and stream isotopic variability across time and space in a High Arctic periglacial landscape

Rapidly changing climate is disrupting the High Arctic’s natural water systems. This disruption demands high quality monitoring of Arctic hydrology to better reconstruct past changes, track ongoing transformations, and assess future environmental threats. Water isotopes are valuable tracers of hydro...

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Main Authors: Akers, Pete D., Kopec, Ben G., Klein, Eric S., Welker, Jeffrey M.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Authorea, Inc. 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/essoar.169444333.36870371/v1
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spelling crwinnower:10.22541/essoar.169444333.36870371/v1 2024-06-02T08:01:02+00:00 Evaporation and water sourcing dominate lake and stream isotopic variability across time and space in a High Arctic periglacial landscape Akers, Pete D. Kopec, Ben G. Klein, Eric S. Welker, Jeffrey M. 2023 http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/essoar.169444333.36870371/v1 unknown Authorea, Inc. posted-content 2023 crwinnower https://doi.org/10.22541/essoar.169444333.36870371/v1 2024-05-07T14:19:27Z Rapidly changing climate is disrupting the High Arctic’s natural water systems. This disruption demands high quality monitoring of Arctic hydrology to better reconstruct past changes, track ongoing transformations, and assess future environmental threats. Water isotopes are valuable tracers of hydrological processes, but logistical challenges limit the length and scope of isotopic monitoring in High Arctic landscapes. Here, we present a comprehensive isotopic survey of 535 water samples taken in 2018–2019 of the lakes, streams, and other surface waters of the periglacial Pituffik Peninsula in far northwest Greenland. The δ O, δ H, and deuterium-excess values of these samples, representing 196 unique sites, grant us unprecedented insight into the environmental drivers of the region’s hydrology and water isotopic variability. We find that the spatial and temporal variability of lake isotopes is dominated by evaporation and connectivity to summer meltwater sources, while evaporation determines interannual isotopic changes. Stream isotopic compositions vary in both space and time based on the relative source balance of tundra snowpack meltwater versus surface melt from the nearby Greenland Ice Sheet. Overall, our survey highlights the diversity of isotopic composition and evolution in Pituffik surface waters, and our complete isotopic and geospatial database provides a strong foundation for future researchers to study hydrological changes at Pituffik and across the Arctic. Water isotope samples taken at individual times or sites in similar periglacial landscapes likely have limited regional representativeness, and increasing the spatiotemporal extent of isotopic sampling is critical to producing accurate and informative High Arctic paleoclimate reconstructions. Other/Unknown Material Arctic Greenland Ice Sheet Pituffik Tundra The Winnower Arctic Greenland Pituffik ENVELOPE(-68.679,-68.679,76.545,76.545)
institution Open Polar
collection The Winnower
op_collection_id crwinnower
language unknown
description Rapidly changing climate is disrupting the High Arctic’s natural water systems. This disruption demands high quality monitoring of Arctic hydrology to better reconstruct past changes, track ongoing transformations, and assess future environmental threats. Water isotopes are valuable tracers of hydrological processes, but logistical challenges limit the length and scope of isotopic monitoring in High Arctic landscapes. Here, we present a comprehensive isotopic survey of 535 water samples taken in 2018–2019 of the lakes, streams, and other surface waters of the periglacial Pituffik Peninsula in far northwest Greenland. The δ O, δ H, and deuterium-excess values of these samples, representing 196 unique sites, grant us unprecedented insight into the environmental drivers of the region’s hydrology and water isotopic variability. We find that the spatial and temporal variability of lake isotopes is dominated by evaporation and connectivity to summer meltwater sources, while evaporation determines interannual isotopic changes. Stream isotopic compositions vary in both space and time based on the relative source balance of tundra snowpack meltwater versus surface melt from the nearby Greenland Ice Sheet. Overall, our survey highlights the diversity of isotopic composition and evolution in Pituffik surface waters, and our complete isotopic and geospatial database provides a strong foundation for future researchers to study hydrological changes at Pituffik and across the Arctic. Water isotope samples taken at individual times or sites in similar periglacial landscapes likely have limited regional representativeness, and increasing the spatiotemporal extent of isotopic sampling is critical to producing accurate and informative High Arctic paleoclimate reconstructions.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Akers, Pete D.
Kopec, Ben G.
Klein, Eric S.
Welker, Jeffrey M.
spellingShingle Akers, Pete D.
Kopec, Ben G.
Klein, Eric S.
Welker, Jeffrey M.
Evaporation and water sourcing dominate lake and stream isotopic variability across time and space in a High Arctic periglacial landscape
author_facet Akers, Pete D.
Kopec, Ben G.
Klein, Eric S.
Welker, Jeffrey M.
author_sort Akers, Pete D.
title Evaporation and water sourcing dominate lake and stream isotopic variability across time and space in a High Arctic periglacial landscape
title_short Evaporation and water sourcing dominate lake and stream isotopic variability across time and space in a High Arctic periglacial landscape
title_full Evaporation and water sourcing dominate lake and stream isotopic variability across time and space in a High Arctic periglacial landscape
title_fullStr Evaporation and water sourcing dominate lake and stream isotopic variability across time and space in a High Arctic periglacial landscape
title_full_unstemmed Evaporation and water sourcing dominate lake and stream isotopic variability across time and space in a High Arctic periglacial landscape
title_sort evaporation and water sourcing dominate lake and stream isotopic variability across time and space in a high arctic periglacial landscape
publisher Authorea, Inc.
publishDate 2023
url http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/essoar.169444333.36870371/v1
long_lat ENVELOPE(-68.679,-68.679,76.545,76.545)
geographic Arctic
Greenland
Pituffik
geographic_facet Arctic
Greenland
Pituffik
genre Arctic
Greenland
Ice Sheet
Pituffik
Tundra
genre_facet Arctic
Greenland
Ice Sheet
Pituffik
Tundra
op_doi https://doi.org/10.22541/essoar.169444333.36870371/v1
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