Using a geochemical method of dissolved and insoluble fractions to characterize surface snow melting and major element elution

A geochemical method to characterize post-depositional melting and elution is demonstrated using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry to measure concentrations of dissolved and insoluble fractions of major crustal elements in snow samples collected from March 2006 to January 2010 at Urumqi G...

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Main Authors: Wu, Guangjian, Li, Peilin, Zhang, Xuelei, Zhang, Chenglong
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ir.rcees.ac.cn/handle/311016/40793
id ftchacadscircees:oai:/ir.rcees.ac.cn:311016/40793
record_format openpolar
spelling ftchacadscircees:oai:/ir.rcees.ac.cn:311016/40793 2023-06-11T04:13:21+02:00 Using a geochemical method of dissolved and insoluble fractions to characterize surface snow melting and major element elution Wu, Guangjian Li, Peilin Zhang, Xuelei Zhang, Chenglong 2018-01-12 http://ir.rcees.ac.cn/handle/311016/40793 unknown JOURNAL OF GLACIOLOGY http://ir.rcees.ac.cn/handle/311016/40793 cn.org.cspace.api.content.CopyrightPolicy@4d764d7a melt-surface mountain glaciers snow and ice chemistry Article 期刊论文 2018 ftchacadscircees 2023-05-28T12:13:15Z A geochemical method to characterize post-depositional melting and elution is demonstrated using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry to measure concentrations of dissolved and insoluble fractions of major crustal elements in snow samples collected from March 2006 to January 2010 at Urumqi Glacier No. 1, Tien Shan. Dust from these samples has compositional homogeneity, suggesting that dust has a stable dissolved fraction percentage (DFP, calculated as dissolved/(dissolved + insoluble)%). Calcium has the highest DFP (averaging 61.5 +/- 19.4%), followed by Na (30.4 +/- 19.6%), Mg (13.2 +/- 9.8%), and K (7.9 +/- 9.8%). Acid input can affect dissolution of Na and Ca. Taking DFP values of unmelted samples as the reference, the higher DFPs refer to strengthened dissolution from acid input, while the lower ones refer to elution. Based on the DFP difference between unmelted and eluted states, an elution sequence Ca > Na > Mg > K is obtained. Some details such as the beginning and the ending stages of elution can be found by DFP and acid input index, while using ion concentration is not capable of this. Our results reveal that acid input is an important mechanism for DFP changes, that the DFP index can provide an effective assessment of snow elution, and that this will aid in understanding low latitude ice cores. Article in Journal/Newspaper Journal of Glaciology Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences: RCEES OpenIR (Chinese Academy of Sciences)
institution Open Polar
collection Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences: RCEES OpenIR (Chinese Academy of Sciences)
op_collection_id ftchacadscircees
language unknown
topic melt-surface
mountain glaciers
snow and ice chemistry
spellingShingle melt-surface
mountain glaciers
snow and ice chemistry
Wu, Guangjian
Li, Peilin
Zhang, Xuelei
Zhang, Chenglong
Using a geochemical method of dissolved and insoluble fractions to characterize surface snow melting and major element elution
topic_facet melt-surface
mountain glaciers
snow and ice chemistry
description A geochemical method to characterize post-depositional melting and elution is demonstrated using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry to measure concentrations of dissolved and insoluble fractions of major crustal elements in snow samples collected from March 2006 to January 2010 at Urumqi Glacier No. 1, Tien Shan. Dust from these samples has compositional homogeneity, suggesting that dust has a stable dissolved fraction percentage (DFP, calculated as dissolved/(dissolved + insoluble)%). Calcium has the highest DFP (averaging 61.5 +/- 19.4%), followed by Na (30.4 +/- 19.6%), Mg (13.2 +/- 9.8%), and K (7.9 +/- 9.8%). Acid input can affect dissolution of Na and Ca. Taking DFP values of unmelted samples as the reference, the higher DFPs refer to strengthened dissolution from acid input, while the lower ones refer to elution. Based on the DFP difference between unmelted and eluted states, an elution sequence Ca > Na > Mg > K is obtained. Some details such as the beginning and the ending stages of elution can be found by DFP and acid input index, while using ion concentration is not capable of this. Our results reveal that acid input is an important mechanism for DFP changes, that the DFP index can provide an effective assessment of snow elution, and that this will aid in understanding low latitude ice cores.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Wu, Guangjian
Li, Peilin
Zhang, Xuelei
Zhang, Chenglong
author_facet Wu, Guangjian
Li, Peilin
Zhang, Xuelei
Zhang, Chenglong
author_sort Wu, Guangjian
title Using a geochemical method of dissolved and insoluble fractions to characterize surface snow melting and major element elution
title_short Using a geochemical method of dissolved and insoluble fractions to characterize surface snow melting and major element elution
title_full Using a geochemical method of dissolved and insoluble fractions to characterize surface snow melting and major element elution
title_fullStr Using a geochemical method of dissolved and insoluble fractions to characterize surface snow melting and major element elution
title_full_unstemmed Using a geochemical method of dissolved and insoluble fractions to characterize surface snow melting and major element elution
title_sort using a geochemical method of dissolved and insoluble fractions to characterize surface snow melting and major element elution
publishDate 2018
url http://ir.rcees.ac.cn/handle/311016/40793
genre Journal of Glaciology
genre_facet Journal of Glaciology
op_relation JOURNAL OF GLACIOLOGY
http://ir.rcees.ac.cn/handle/311016/40793
op_rights cn.org.cspace.api.content.CopyrightPolicy@4d764d7a
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