Perennial N2 supersaturation in an Antarctic lake

The results of a study are reported which, for the first time, documents the supersaturation of N2 in a lake. Dissolved N2 levels of 145 percent and 163 percent were determined for Antarctica's Lake Hoare from samples taken just below the ice cover and at a depth of 12 m, respectively. The rela...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wharton, Robert A., Jr., Mckay, Christopher P., Mancinelli, Rocco L., Simmons, George M., Jr.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1987
Subjects:
55
Online Access:http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19870043218
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Summary:The results of a study are reported which, for the first time, documents the supersaturation of N2 in a lake. Dissolved N2 levels of 145 percent and 163 percent were determined for Antarctica's Lake Hoare from samples taken just below the ice cover and at a depth of 12 m, respectively. The relative importance of biological and abiological sources is reflected in the ratio of N2 concentration to O2 concentration. In Lake Hoare this ratio was 1.20 at the ice/water interface and 1.05 at 12 m, considerably different from the ratio in equilibrium with air (about 1.8). Based on these results, it is determined that about half of the net O2 production in the lake is the result of biological processes. The significance of these results for the putative ice-covered paleolakes in the canyon regions of Mars is discussed.