Large Chemical Variations in ice Formed above Lake Vostok, Antarctica

Lake Vostok is the largest subglacial lake identified in Antarctica. It is 260 km long, 80 km wide, over 500 m deep and lies beneath $\sim$4 km of ice. It has received great scientific interest since it may provide clues to the survival of life on Earth during global glaciations, and provides an ana...

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Main Authors: Royston-Bishop, G, Tranter, M, Siegert, MJ
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1983/c961114b-046d-4ac2-b236-ba590d6db3c5
https://research-information.bris.ac.uk/en/publications/c961114b-046d-4ac2-b236-ba590d6db3c5
id ftubristolcris:oai:research-information.bris.ac.uk:publications/c961114b-046d-4ac2-b236-ba590d6db3c5
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of Bristol: Bristol Research
op_collection_id ftubristolcris
language English
description Lake Vostok is the largest subglacial lake identified in Antarctica. It is 260 km long, 80 km wide, over 500 m deep and lies beneath $\sim$4 km of ice. It has received great scientific interest since it may provide clues to the survival of life on Earth during global glaciations, and provides an analogue for environments that may harbour life on icy planets and moons, such as Europa. Our current understanding of physical, chemical and biological conditions in the lake comes from samples of water which have refrozen to the underside of the ice sheet. Analysis of this `accreted ice' reveals large concurrent variations in the concentrations of major ions. For example, Mg^{2+}$ and SO4^{2-}$ vary by a factor of $\sim$400, Na^{+}$ and Cl^{-}$ by a factor of $\sim$40, and K^{+}$ and Ca^{2+}$ by a factor of $\sim$10. The inferred ionic content of the lake water, from which this accreted ice formed, ranges from $\sim$1 to 40 mM in terms of total dissolved anions. Clearly, these recorded ionic extremes have implications for the lake's environment, which in turn may be important to microbial life in the lake. We seek explanations for this variation by considering plausible perturbations to the lake system, possible effects of the varying environmental origin of accreted ice, and sample treatment. Specifically, these are: i) changes in lake volume in response to changes in ice sheet thickness and flow direction; ii) the sporadic contribution of saline water from a deeper-rock reservoir; iii) periodic upwelling events, bringing more concentrated waters from depth; iv) variations in the chemistry of icemelt feeding the lake; v) formation of ice near the grounding lines of a shallow embayment to the west of the main lake; vi) the effect of sampling ice crystal boundaries; and vii) post-sampling reactions with mineral particulates. The likelihood of each of these possibilities will be discussed. Lake Vostok is the largest subglacial lake identified in Antarctica. It is 260 km long, 80 km wide, over 500 m deep and lies beneath $\sim$4 km of ice. It has received great scientific interest since it may provide clues to the survival of life on Earth during global glaciations, and provides an analogue for environments that may harbour life on icy planets and moons, such as Europa. Our current understanding of physical, chemical and biological conditions in the lake comes from samples of water which have refrozen to the underside of the ice sheet. Analysis of this `accreted ice' reveals large concurrent variations in the concentrations of major ions. For example, Mg^{2+}$ and SO4^{2-}$ vary by a factor of $\sim$400, Na^{+}$ and Cl^{-}$ by a factor of $\sim$40, and K^{+}$ and Ca^{2+}$ by a factor of $\sim$10. The inferred ionic content of the lake water, from which this accreted ice formed, ranges from $\sim$1 to 40 mM in terms of total dissolved anions. Clearly, these recorded ionic extremes have implications for the lake's environment, which in turn may be important to microbial life in the lake. We seek explanations for this variation by considering plausible perturbations to the lake system, possible effects of the varying environmental origin of accreted ice, and sample treatment. Specifically, these are: i) changes in lake volume in response to changes in ice sheet thickness and flow direction; ii) the sporadic contribution of saline water from a deeper-rock reservoir; iii) periodic upwelling events, bringing more concentrated waters from depth; iv) variations in the chemistry of icemelt feeding the lake; v) formation of ice near the grounding lines of a shallow embayment to the west of the main lake; vi) the effect of sampling ice crystal boundaries; and vii) post-sampling reactions with mineral particulates. The likelihood of each of these possibilities will be discussed.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Royston-Bishop, G
Tranter, M
Siegert, MJ
spellingShingle Royston-Bishop, G
Tranter, M
Siegert, MJ
Large Chemical Variations in ice Formed above Lake Vostok, Antarctica
author_facet Royston-Bishop, G
Tranter, M
Siegert, MJ
author_sort Royston-Bishop, G
title Large Chemical Variations in ice Formed above Lake Vostok, Antarctica
title_short Large Chemical Variations in ice Formed above Lake Vostok, Antarctica
title_full Large Chemical Variations in ice Formed above Lake Vostok, Antarctica
title_fullStr Large Chemical Variations in ice Formed above Lake Vostok, Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Large Chemical Variations in ice Formed above Lake Vostok, Antarctica
title_sort large chemical variations in ice formed above lake vostok, antarctica
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/1983/c961114b-046d-4ac2-b236-ba590d6db3c5
https://research-information.bris.ac.uk/en/publications/c961114b-046d-4ac2-b236-ba590d6db3c5
long_lat ENVELOPE(106.000,106.000,-77.500,-77.500)
geographic Lake Vostok
geographic_facet Lake Vostok
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
Ice Sheet
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
Ice Sheet
op_source Royston-Bishop , G , Tranter , M & Siegert , MJ 2004 , ' Large Chemical Variations in ice Formed above Lake Vostok, Antarctica ' , Eos , vol. 85(47) .
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
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spelling ftubristolcris:oai:research-information.bris.ac.uk:publications/c961114b-046d-4ac2-b236-ba590d6db3c5 2023-05-15T13:57:49+02:00 Large Chemical Variations in ice Formed above Lake Vostok, Antarctica Royston-Bishop, G Tranter, M Siegert, MJ 2004 http://hdl.handle.net/1983/c961114b-046d-4ac2-b236-ba590d6db3c5 https://research-information.bris.ac.uk/en/publications/c961114b-046d-4ac2-b236-ba590d6db3c5 eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Royston-Bishop , G , Tranter , M & Siegert , MJ 2004 , ' Large Chemical Variations in ice Formed above Lake Vostok, Antarctica ' , Eos , vol. 85(47) . article 2004 ftubristolcris 2021-08-02T09:53:29Z Lake Vostok is the largest subglacial lake identified in Antarctica. It is 260 km long, 80 km wide, over 500 m deep and lies beneath $\sim$4 km of ice. It has received great scientific interest since it may provide clues to the survival of life on Earth during global glaciations, and provides an analogue for environments that may harbour life on icy planets and moons, such as Europa. Our current understanding of physical, chemical and biological conditions in the lake comes from samples of water which have refrozen to the underside of the ice sheet. Analysis of this `accreted ice' reveals large concurrent variations in the concentrations of major ions. For example, Mg^{2+}$ and SO4^{2-}$ vary by a factor of $\sim$400, Na^{+}$ and Cl^{-}$ by a factor of $\sim$40, and K^{+}$ and Ca^{2+}$ by a factor of $\sim$10. The inferred ionic content of the lake water, from which this accreted ice formed, ranges from $\sim$1 to 40 mM in terms of total dissolved anions. Clearly, these recorded ionic extremes have implications for the lake's environment, which in turn may be important to microbial life in the lake. We seek explanations for this variation by considering plausible perturbations to the lake system, possible effects of the varying environmental origin of accreted ice, and sample treatment. Specifically, these are: i) changes in lake volume in response to changes in ice sheet thickness and flow direction; ii) the sporadic contribution of saline water from a deeper-rock reservoir; iii) periodic upwelling events, bringing more concentrated waters from depth; iv) variations in the chemistry of icemelt feeding the lake; v) formation of ice near the grounding lines of a shallow embayment to the west of the main lake; vi) the effect of sampling ice crystal boundaries; and vii) post-sampling reactions with mineral particulates. The likelihood of each of these possibilities will be discussed. Lake Vostok is the largest subglacial lake identified in Antarctica. It is 260 km long, 80 km wide, over 500 m deep and lies beneath $\sim$4 km of ice. It has received great scientific interest since it may provide clues to the survival of life on Earth during global glaciations, and provides an analogue for environments that may harbour life on icy planets and moons, such as Europa. Our current understanding of physical, chemical and biological conditions in the lake comes from samples of water which have refrozen to the underside of the ice sheet. Analysis of this `accreted ice' reveals large concurrent variations in the concentrations of major ions. For example, Mg^{2+}$ and SO4^{2-}$ vary by a factor of $\sim$400, Na^{+}$ and Cl^{-}$ by a factor of $\sim$40, and K^{+}$ and Ca^{2+}$ by a factor of $\sim$10. The inferred ionic content of the lake water, from which this accreted ice formed, ranges from $\sim$1 to 40 mM in terms of total dissolved anions. Clearly, these recorded ionic extremes have implications for the lake's environment, which in turn may be important to microbial life in the lake. We seek explanations for this variation by considering plausible perturbations to the lake system, possible effects of the varying environmental origin of accreted ice, and sample treatment. Specifically, these are: i) changes in lake volume in response to changes in ice sheet thickness and flow direction; ii) the sporadic contribution of saline water from a deeper-rock reservoir; iii) periodic upwelling events, bringing more concentrated waters from depth; iv) variations in the chemistry of icemelt feeding the lake; v) formation of ice near the grounding lines of a shallow embayment to the west of the main lake; vi) the effect of sampling ice crystal boundaries; and vii) post-sampling reactions with mineral particulates. The likelihood of each of these possibilities will be discussed. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica Ice Sheet University of Bristol: Bristol Research Lake Vostok ENVELOPE(106.000,106.000,-77.500,-77.500)