Using the δ18O-Salinity Relationship to Identify Freshwater Inputs to a North Atlantic Estuary

The δ18O-Salinity relationship allows us to define distinct end members in Bedford Basin, a system supplied by the North Atlantic Ocean. An isotopic analysis was performed on water in and around Bedford Basin to resolve contributions of offshore water, river water, and precipitation throughout the y...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kerrigan, Elizabeth
Other Authors: Department of Oceanography, Master of Science, n/a, Dr. Dan Kelley, Dr. Helmuth Thomas, Dr. Markus Kienast, Dr. Doug Wallace, Not Applicable
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10222/56759
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spelling ftdalhouse:oai:DalSpace.library.dal.ca:10222/56759 2023-05-15T17:29:28+02:00 Using the δ18O-Salinity Relationship to Identify Freshwater Inputs to a North Atlantic Estuary Kerrigan, Elizabeth Department of Oceanography Master of Science n/a Dr. Dan Kelley Dr. Helmuth Thomas Dr. Markus Kienast Dr. Doug Wallace Not Applicable 2015-05-01T12:54:25Z http://hdl.handle.net/10222/56759 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10222/56759 Bedford Basin Chemical Oceanography Salinity Oxygen Isotopes 2015 ftdalhouse 2021-12-29T18:12:04Z The δ18O-Salinity relationship allows us to define distinct end members in Bedford Basin, a system supplied by the North Atlantic Ocean. An isotopic analysis was performed on water in and around Bedford Basin to resolve contributions of offshore water, river water, and precipitation throughout the year. All freshwater inputs were found to co-vary when an annual cycle was defined, however there is a significant seasonal difference between the δ18O of winter and summer freshwater inputs, leading to their selection as end members. Bedford Basin surface (1 m) samples confirm a dominant input of offshore water (~88%) and minimal freshwater input, dominated by “summer” precipitation, while deep samples (60 m) show even less freshwater from land (<3%). At 60 m, the zero-salinity intercept of the δ18O-S relationship suggests that offshore freshwater dominates stable bottom waters (-15.55‰), and only bottom waters mixed with Bedford Basin surface water show freshwater from land (-7‰). Other/Unknown Material North Atlantic Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository Bedford ENVELOPE(-67.150,-67.150,-66.467,-66.467)
institution Open Polar
collection Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftdalhouse
language English
topic Bedford Basin
Chemical Oceanography
Salinity
Oxygen Isotopes
spellingShingle Bedford Basin
Chemical Oceanography
Salinity
Oxygen Isotopes
Kerrigan, Elizabeth
Using the δ18O-Salinity Relationship to Identify Freshwater Inputs to a North Atlantic Estuary
topic_facet Bedford Basin
Chemical Oceanography
Salinity
Oxygen Isotopes
description The δ18O-Salinity relationship allows us to define distinct end members in Bedford Basin, a system supplied by the North Atlantic Ocean. An isotopic analysis was performed on water in and around Bedford Basin to resolve contributions of offshore water, river water, and precipitation throughout the year. All freshwater inputs were found to co-vary when an annual cycle was defined, however there is a significant seasonal difference between the δ18O of winter and summer freshwater inputs, leading to their selection as end members. Bedford Basin surface (1 m) samples confirm a dominant input of offshore water (~88%) and minimal freshwater input, dominated by “summer” precipitation, while deep samples (60 m) show even less freshwater from land (<3%). At 60 m, the zero-salinity intercept of the δ18O-S relationship suggests that offshore freshwater dominates stable bottom waters (-15.55‰), and only bottom waters mixed with Bedford Basin surface water show freshwater from land (-7‰).
author2 Department of Oceanography
Master of Science
n/a
Dr. Dan Kelley
Dr. Helmuth Thomas
Dr. Markus Kienast
Dr. Doug Wallace
Not Applicable
author Kerrigan, Elizabeth
author_facet Kerrigan, Elizabeth
author_sort Kerrigan, Elizabeth
title Using the δ18O-Salinity Relationship to Identify Freshwater Inputs to a North Atlantic Estuary
title_short Using the δ18O-Salinity Relationship to Identify Freshwater Inputs to a North Atlantic Estuary
title_full Using the δ18O-Salinity Relationship to Identify Freshwater Inputs to a North Atlantic Estuary
title_fullStr Using the δ18O-Salinity Relationship to Identify Freshwater Inputs to a North Atlantic Estuary
title_full_unstemmed Using the δ18O-Salinity Relationship to Identify Freshwater Inputs to a North Atlantic Estuary
title_sort using the δ18o-salinity relationship to identify freshwater inputs to a north atlantic estuary
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10222/56759
long_lat ENVELOPE(-67.150,-67.150,-66.467,-66.467)
geographic Bedford
geographic_facet Bedford
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10222/56759
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