Emission and absorption of CO2 during the sea ice formation and melting in the high Arctic

The carbonate system of the Arctic sea ice is considered. The observations were conducted in the Nansen Basin at the drifting station North Pole-35 in 2007–2008. It was found that total alkalinity – salinity ratio (TA/S) and total inorganic carbon – salinity ratio (TC/S) as well as TA/TC ratio in th...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Ice and Snow
Main Author: A. P. Nedashkovsky
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Russian
Published: Nauka 2015
Subjects:
Q
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.15356/2076-6734-2012-1-75-84
https://doaj.org/article/e01428e0a96449adaa7b34c3df55ea02
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Summary:The carbonate system of the Arctic sea ice is considered. The observations were conducted in the Nansen Basin at the drifting station North Pole-35 in 2007–2008. It was found that total alkalinity – salinity ratio (TA/S) and total inorganic carbon – salinity ratio (TC/S) as well as TA/TC ratio in the ice column and seawater column are similar. The deviations from that pattern were observed in the upper thin layer of the young and first-year ice and in the ice snow cap. The TA/TC ratio (equals to ~2) in the ice snow cap was related with the calcium hydrocarbonate decay and CO₂ removal. It was shown that CO₂ removal was due to its emission into the atmosphere. The CO₂ flux was equal to ~0.02 mol/m² for season. The water formed during melting of the first-year ice was significantly under saturated of CO₂ and hence it may be a sink of 0.05 0.07 mol/m² of the atmospheric CO₂ per season.