Weathering in the Glacial Foreland of Southern and Western Greenland

Glaciers physically grind up underlying rock and create fine-grained sediment that has a high potential for chemical weathering. Subsequent weathering of these sediments produces solutes, including nutrients and radiogenic isotopes, which are transported by streams to the world’s oceans where they c...

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Published in:UF Journal of Undergraduate Research
Main Authors: Da Prat, Fabio Alessandro, Martin, Ellen
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Center for Undergraduate Research, University of Florida 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.flvc.org/UFJUR/article/view/106168
https://doi.org/10.32473/ufjur.v20i2.106168
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spelling ftfloridaclaojs:oai:journals.flvc.org:article/106168 2023-05-15T16:26:28+02:00 Weathering in the Glacial Foreland of Southern and Western Greenland Da Prat, Fabio Alessandro Martin, Ellen 2019-02-27 application/pdf https://journals.flvc.org/UFJUR/article/view/106168 https://doi.org/10.32473/ufjur.v20i2.106168 eng eng Center for Undergraduate Research, University of Florida https://journals.flvc.org/UFJUR/article/view/106168/103283 https://journals.flvc.org/UFJUR/article/view/106168 doi:10.32473/ufjur.v20i2.106168 Copyright (c) 2019 Fabio Alessandro Da Prat, Ellen Martin http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 CC-BY-NC-ND UF Journal of Undergraduate Research; Vol 20 No 2 (2019): UF Journal of Undergraduate Research 2638-0668 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2019 ftfloridaclaojs https://doi.org/10.32473/ufjur.v20i2.106168 2021-06-06T16:21:19Z Glaciers physically grind up underlying rock and create fine-grained sediment that has a high potential for chemical weathering. Subsequent weathering of these sediments produces solutes, including nutrients and radiogenic isotopes, which are transported by streams to the world’s oceans where they can impact primary productivity and record past ice sheet activity. Previous research on the geochemistry of bedrock, bedload sediment and stream waters demonstrated that the extent of chemical weathering varies across a transect in western Greenland due to variations in either exposure age or precipitation (Scribner et al., 2015), and that variations in the extent of weathering associated with retreat of the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) may account for observed trends in solutes during the last deglacial period. This project adds a new study area in southern Greenland that has higher precipitation, more vegetation, a different lithology, and a range of exposure ages, to address the leading factors contributing to the extent of weathering. Based on the relative proportions of cations and percent change between Na+K concentrations of bedload to waters, the southern region is undergoing less extensive weathering than the western transect, which suggests that lithology may be an important driver of weathering, and that exposure age and precipitation are less important factors than expected. The results also suggest there are additional factors that contribute to weathering that were not accounted for in this study, such as dissolved organic matter and microbial activity. Article in Journal/Newspaper Greenland Ice Sheet Florida Online Journals (FloridaOJ) Greenland UF Journal of Undergraduate Research 20 2
institution Open Polar
collection Florida Online Journals (FloridaOJ)
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language English
description Glaciers physically grind up underlying rock and create fine-grained sediment that has a high potential for chemical weathering. Subsequent weathering of these sediments produces solutes, including nutrients and radiogenic isotopes, which are transported by streams to the world’s oceans where they can impact primary productivity and record past ice sheet activity. Previous research on the geochemistry of bedrock, bedload sediment and stream waters demonstrated that the extent of chemical weathering varies across a transect in western Greenland due to variations in either exposure age or precipitation (Scribner et al., 2015), and that variations in the extent of weathering associated with retreat of the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) may account for observed trends in solutes during the last deglacial period. This project adds a new study area in southern Greenland that has higher precipitation, more vegetation, a different lithology, and a range of exposure ages, to address the leading factors contributing to the extent of weathering. Based on the relative proportions of cations and percent change between Na+K concentrations of bedload to waters, the southern region is undergoing less extensive weathering than the western transect, which suggests that lithology may be an important driver of weathering, and that exposure age and precipitation are less important factors than expected. The results also suggest there are additional factors that contribute to weathering that were not accounted for in this study, such as dissolved organic matter and microbial activity.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Da Prat, Fabio Alessandro
Martin, Ellen
spellingShingle Da Prat, Fabio Alessandro
Martin, Ellen
Weathering in the Glacial Foreland of Southern and Western Greenland
author_facet Da Prat, Fabio Alessandro
Martin, Ellen
author_sort Da Prat, Fabio Alessandro
title Weathering in the Glacial Foreland of Southern and Western Greenland
title_short Weathering in the Glacial Foreland of Southern and Western Greenland
title_full Weathering in the Glacial Foreland of Southern and Western Greenland
title_fullStr Weathering in the Glacial Foreland of Southern and Western Greenland
title_full_unstemmed Weathering in the Glacial Foreland of Southern and Western Greenland
title_sort weathering in the glacial foreland of southern and western greenland
publisher Center for Undergraduate Research, University of Florida
publishDate 2019
url https://journals.flvc.org/UFJUR/article/view/106168
https://doi.org/10.32473/ufjur.v20i2.106168
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
genre Greenland
Ice Sheet
genre_facet Greenland
Ice Sheet
op_source UF Journal of Undergraduate Research; Vol 20 No 2 (2019): UF Journal of Undergraduate Research
2638-0668
op_relation https://journals.flvc.org/UFJUR/article/view/106168/103283
https://journals.flvc.org/UFJUR/article/view/106168
doi:10.32473/ufjur.v20i2.106168
op_rights Copyright (c) 2019 Fabio Alessandro Da Prat, Ellen Martin
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-ND
op_doi https://doi.org/10.32473/ufjur.v20i2.106168
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