No evidence for 20th century acceleration in fossil carbon supply to the ocean from thawing permafrost in the Lena River catchment

Release of carbon from thawing permafrost is a potential positive feedback in a warming climate. Thawing of permafrost is expected to make ancient organic matter bioavailable resulting in increased emissions of greenhouse gases and may also result in increased transport of particulate organic matter...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mollenhauer, Gesine, Winterfeld, Maria, Hefter, Jens, Grotheer, Hendrik, Kattein, Laura, Ransby, Daniela
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/50144/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.30a1f7b2-75db-4c0d-85cf-c180f70700a3
id ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:50144
record_format openpolar
spelling ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:50144 2024-09-15T18:17:43+00:00 No evidence for 20th century acceleration in fossil carbon supply to the ocean from thawing permafrost in the Lena River catchment Mollenhauer, Gesine Winterfeld, Maria Hefter, Jens Grotheer, Hendrik Kattein, Laura Ransby, Daniela 2019-08 https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/50144/ https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.30a1f7b2-75db-4c0d-85cf-c180f70700a3 unknown Mollenhauer, G. orcid:0000-0001-5138-564X , Winterfeld, M. , Hefter, J. orcid:0000-0002-5823-1966 , Grotheer, H. orcid:0000-0003-0207-3767 , Kattein, L. and Ransby, D. orcid:0000-0002-3643-333X (2019) No evidence for 20th century acceleration in fossil carbon supply to the ocean from thawing permafrost in the Lena River catchment , Goldschmidt Conference, Barcelona, 18 August 2019 - 23 August 2019 . hdl:10013/epic.30a1f7b2-75db-4c0d-85cf-c180f70700a3 EPIC3Goldschmidt Conference, Barcelona, 2019-08-18-2019-08-23 Conference notRev 2019 ftawi 2024-06-24T04:22:11Z Release of carbon from thawing permafrost is a potential positive feedback in a warming climate. Thawing of permafrost is expected to make ancient organic matter bioavailable resulting in increased emissions of greenhouse gases and may also result in increased transport of particulate organic matter through river systems to the ocean. This might have strong effects on near-shore biogeochemistry. Organic matter delivery to the near-shore zone likely has accelerated over the past century in a warming Arctic with increased river discharge leading to increased mobilization of ancient permafrost organic matter. We studied short sediment cores recovered off two of the main branches of the Lena River Delta, receiving the suspended matter transported from the mainly permafrost covered Lena catchment. The cores were dated using 210Pbxs and 137Cs and cover the past 70 to 120 years. Our compound-specific 14C results for aquatic/marine and terrigenous n-alkanoic acids isolated from the sediments reveal constant age at deposition of the terrigenous biomarkers, while that of the aquatic biomarkers decreased in the most recent decades. Paired with evidence from compound-specific d13C and dD, this suggest a rapid decrease in relative contributions of aquatic/marine-derived compounds, likely through selective degradation, while the source and supply of the terrigenous fraction remained constant in spite of known climatic changes in the hinterland. Conference Object lena river permafrost Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
institution Open Polar
collection Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
op_collection_id ftawi
language unknown
description Release of carbon from thawing permafrost is a potential positive feedback in a warming climate. Thawing of permafrost is expected to make ancient organic matter bioavailable resulting in increased emissions of greenhouse gases and may also result in increased transport of particulate organic matter through river systems to the ocean. This might have strong effects on near-shore biogeochemistry. Organic matter delivery to the near-shore zone likely has accelerated over the past century in a warming Arctic with increased river discharge leading to increased mobilization of ancient permafrost organic matter. We studied short sediment cores recovered off two of the main branches of the Lena River Delta, receiving the suspended matter transported from the mainly permafrost covered Lena catchment. The cores were dated using 210Pbxs and 137Cs and cover the past 70 to 120 years. Our compound-specific 14C results for aquatic/marine and terrigenous n-alkanoic acids isolated from the sediments reveal constant age at deposition of the terrigenous biomarkers, while that of the aquatic biomarkers decreased in the most recent decades. Paired with evidence from compound-specific d13C and dD, this suggest a rapid decrease in relative contributions of aquatic/marine-derived compounds, likely through selective degradation, while the source and supply of the terrigenous fraction remained constant in spite of known climatic changes in the hinterland.
format Conference Object
author Mollenhauer, Gesine
Winterfeld, Maria
Hefter, Jens
Grotheer, Hendrik
Kattein, Laura
Ransby, Daniela
spellingShingle Mollenhauer, Gesine
Winterfeld, Maria
Hefter, Jens
Grotheer, Hendrik
Kattein, Laura
Ransby, Daniela
No evidence for 20th century acceleration in fossil carbon supply to the ocean from thawing permafrost in the Lena River catchment
author_facet Mollenhauer, Gesine
Winterfeld, Maria
Hefter, Jens
Grotheer, Hendrik
Kattein, Laura
Ransby, Daniela
author_sort Mollenhauer, Gesine
title No evidence for 20th century acceleration in fossil carbon supply to the ocean from thawing permafrost in the Lena River catchment
title_short No evidence for 20th century acceleration in fossil carbon supply to the ocean from thawing permafrost in the Lena River catchment
title_full No evidence for 20th century acceleration in fossil carbon supply to the ocean from thawing permafrost in the Lena River catchment
title_fullStr No evidence for 20th century acceleration in fossil carbon supply to the ocean from thawing permafrost in the Lena River catchment
title_full_unstemmed No evidence for 20th century acceleration in fossil carbon supply to the ocean from thawing permafrost in the Lena River catchment
title_sort no evidence for 20th century acceleration in fossil carbon supply to the ocean from thawing permafrost in the lena river catchment
publishDate 2019
url https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/50144/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.30a1f7b2-75db-4c0d-85cf-c180f70700a3
genre lena river
permafrost
genre_facet lena river
permafrost
op_source EPIC3Goldschmidt Conference, Barcelona, 2019-08-18-2019-08-23
op_relation Mollenhauer, G. orcid:0000-0001-5138-564X , Winterfeld, M. , Hefter, J. orcid:0000-0002-5823-1966 , Grotheer, H. orcid:0000-0003-0207-3767 , Kattein, L. and Ransby, D. orcid:0000-0002-3643-333X (2019) No evidence for 20th century acceleration in fossil carbon supply to the ocean from thawing permafrost in the Lena River catchment , Goldschmidt Conference, Barcelona, 18 August 2019 - 23 August 2019 . hdl:10013/epic.30a1f7b2-75db-4c0d-85cf-c180f70700a3
_version_ 1810455803708047360