Discharge of Meteoric Water in the Eastern Norwegian Sea since the Last Glacial Period
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/16079Dato
2019-07-03Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Hong, Wei-Li; Lepland, Aivo; Himmler, Tobias; Kim, Ji‐Hoon; Chand, Shyam; Sahy, Diana; Solomon, Evan A.; Rae, James W. B.; Martma, Tõnu; Nam, Seung‐Il; Knies, JochenSammendrag
Submarine groundwater discharge could impact the transport of critical solutes to the ocean.
However, its driver(s), significance over geological time scales, and geographical coverage are poorly
understood. We characterize a submarine groundwater seep from the continental slope off northern Norway
where substantial amount of meteoric water was detected. We reconstruct the seepage history from textural
relationships and U‐Th geochronology of authigenic minerals. We demonstrate how glacial‐interglacial
dynamics have promoted submarine groundwater circulation more than 100 km offshore and result in high
fluxes of critical solutes to the ocean. Such cryosphere‐hydrosphere coupling is likely common in the
circum‐Arctic implying that future decay of glaciers and permafrost in a warming Arctic is expected to
attenuate such a coupled process and thus decreases the export of critical solutes.
Beskrivelse
Source at https://doi.org/10.1029/2019GL084237.