Oxygen supersaturation in ice-covered Antarctic lakes - Biological versus physical contributions

Lake Hoare is one of a number of ice-covered polar lakes in the Dry Valley Region of southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Analysis of N2, O2, and Ar in bubbles from this lake's ice indicates that while O2 is about 2.4 times supersaturated in the water below the ice, only 11 percent of the O2 inp...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Craig, H., Wharton, R. A., Jr., Mckay, C. P.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1992
Subjects:
55
Online Access:http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19920038874
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Summary:Lake Hoare is one of a number of ice-covered polar lakes in the Dry Valley Region of southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Analysis of N2, O2, and Ar in bubbles from this lake's ice indicates that while O2 is about 2.4 times supersaturated in the water below the ice, only 11 percent of the O2 input to this lake is due to biological activity and the balance is derived from meltwater inflow. In Lake Hoare, as much as 70 percent of total gas loss may occur by advection through the ice cover; the remaining gas fractions are removed by respiration at the lower boundary in the case of O2, and by molecular exchange with the atmosphere in the peripheral summer moat around the ice.