Physical properties and stable isotope composition of rain, river, lake, and groundwater samples in the Canadian Arctic tundra and subarctic taiga (Summer 2018 and 2019)

This data set describes surface water and late season snow melt physical and geochemical observations collected around the Greiner Lake Watershed (near Cambridge Bay, NU) over July 2018 and between April and June 2019, as well as several rain, river, lake, and groundwater samples collected opportuni...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Levasseur, Simon, Brown, Kristina Anne, Langlois, Alexandre, McLennan, Donald
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: PANGAEA 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.925387
https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.925387
Description
Summary:This data set describes surface water and late season snow melt physical and geochemical observations collected around the Greiner Lake Watershed (near Cambridge Bay, NU) over July 2018 and between April and June 2019, as well as several rain, river, lake, and groundwater samples collected opportunistically. Snow and surface water samples were collected as part of the project entitled "Development of a multi-scale cryosphere monitoring network for the Kitikmeot region and Northwest territories using in-situ measurements, modeling and remote sensing" led by Dr. Alex Langlois, Université de Sherbrooke. Snow density profiles were measured by extracting snow samples at 3 cm intervals using 192 cm3 and 100 cm3 density cutters. The samples were weighed using a Pesola light series scale (100 g) from which density was calculated. Snow temperature was determined using a digital temperature probe (+/- 0.1°C). Surface water and late season snow melt geochemical properties were also determined following the methods outlined in Levasseur et al., (submitted). Briefly, snow was collected into 1 L HDPE plastic snow containers using a clean plastic trowel. Snow samples were melted at room and/or fridge temperature, with melt progression checked at regular intervals. Once melted, samples were filtered through 0.22 μm Sterivex-GV filters into Wheaton 4 mL Amber Vials with TFE-Lined Caps for the analysis of stable isotope composition (δ18O-H2O and δ2H-H2O). Rain samples were collected using a funnel rain gauge at the Canadian High Arctic Research Station, whereas lake and pond samples were collected from surface waters at the shore or edge, respectively. Soil and pore water samples were collected by digging a hole, filling containers and pressing their contents through a filter with a pestle. All water samples were then processed identically to the snow melt samples. River water samples were also collected from Freshwater Creek (69.131°N, -104.991°E), which directly drains Greiner Lake. Surface water samples for the determination ...