Permafrost cores (4.5-7.5 m long) were collected April 10th-19th, 2018, along a geomorphic gradient near Drew Point, Alaska to characterize active layer and permafrost geochemistry and material properties. Cores were collected from a young drained lake basin, an ancient drained lake basin, and primary surface that has not been reworked by thaw lake cycles. Measurements of total organic carbon (TOC) and total nitrogen (TN) content, stable carbon isotope ratios (δ13C) and radiocarbon (14C) analyses of bulk soils/sediments were conducted on 45 samples from 3 permafrost cores. Porewaters were extracted from these same core sections and used to measure salinity, dissolved organic carbon (DOC), total dissolved nitrogen (TDN), anion (Cl-, Br-, SO4 2-, NO3 -), and trace metal (Ca, Mn, Al, Ba, Sr, Si, and Fe) concentrations. Radiogenic strontium (87Sr/86Sr) was measured on a subset of porewater samples. Cores were also sampled for material property measurements such as dry bulk density, water content, and grain size fractions.
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Organic carbon, mercury, and sediment characteristics along a land–shore transect in Arctic Alaska
Abstract. Climate warming in the Arctic results in thawing permafrost and associated processes like thermokarst, especially in ice-rich permafrost regions. Since permafrost soils are one of the largest organic carbon reservoirs of the world, their thawing leads to the release of greenhouse gases due to increasing microbial activity with rising soil temperature, further exacerbating climate warming. To enhance the predictions of potential future impacts of permafrost thaw, a detailed assessment of changes in soil characteristics in response to thermokarst processes in permafrost landscapes is needed, which we investigated in this study in an Arctic coastal lowland. We analysed six sediment cores from the Arctic Coastal Plain of northern Alaska, each representing a different landscape feature along a gradient from upland to thermokarst lake and drained basin to thermokarst lagoon in various development stages. For the analysis, a multiproxy approach was used, including sedimentological (grain size, bulk density, ice content), biogeochemical (total organic carbon (TOC), TOC density (TOCvol), total nitrogen (TN), stable carbon isotopes (δ13C), TOC/TN ratio, mercury (Hg)), and lipid biomarker (n-alkanes, n-alkanols, and their ratios) parameters. We found that a semi-drained state of thermokarst lakes features the lowest OC content, and TOC and TN are generally higher in unfrozen deposits, hinting at a more intact state of organic matter. Indicated by the average chain length (ACL), δ13C, Paq, and Pwax, we found a stronger influence of aquatic organic matter (OM) in the OM composition in the soils covered by water compared to those not covered by water. Moreover, the results of the δ13C, TOC/TN ratio, and CPI indicate that the saline deposits contain stronger degraded OM than the deposits not influenced by saltwater. Additionally, we found positive correlations between the TOC and TOCvol and the Hg content in the deposits. The results indicate that thermokarst-influenced deposits tend to accumulate Hg during thawed periods and thus contain more Hg than the upland permafrost deposits that have not been impacted by lake formation. Our findings offer valuable insights into the dynamics of carbon storage and vulnerability to decomposition in coastal permafrost landscapes, reflecting the interplay of environmental factors, landform characteristics, and climate change impacts on Arctic permafrost environments.
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- PAR ID:
- 10608023
- Publisher / Repository:
- Biogeosciences
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Biogeosciences
- Volume:
- 22
- Issue:
- 12
- ISSN:
- 1726-4189
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 2871 to 2887
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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