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Using Stable Isotopes to Determine Hyporheic Zone Flow Paths in Antarctic Streams Michael Gooseff gooseff@colorado.edu gooseff@colorado.edu http://ucsu.colorado.edu/~gooseff Diane McKnight Bruce Vaughn
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Overview Dry Valleys Hydrology Introduction to Hyporheic Zone Introduction to Isotopes Methods and Field Work Results Conclusions
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Winds strong enough to sculpt rock
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Dry Valleys Hydrology Polar desert “oasis” located at ~78 o S “ice-free” Dry (<10 cm precip per year) Cold (average air temp = -20 o C) Barren landscape Glaciers, soils, streams and lakes No higher-order plants Low anthropogenic disturbance
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Dry Valley Stream Hydrology (cont’) 6-10 week flow season large diel flow changes streambeds = porous alluvium driven by energy balance on the glaciers
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Orange and Black benthic stream algal mats
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The Hyporheic Zone The hyporheic zone is an area of saturated alluvium under and adjacent to a stream Definition: subsurface mixing zone in which at least 10% of the water has recently been in the stream and has a downstream direction of flow Very important in Dry Valley stream hydrology Ecosystem processes Low flow years
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active layer permafrost
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Modeling Equations Transient Storage model developed by Bencala and Walters, 1983 storage zone advection stream dispersion transient storage 1 o loss storage lossexchange
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Previous DV Tracer Studies 1994 – Huey Creek (Runkel et al., 1998) Rapid hydrologic exchange between stream and hyporheic zone as high as 1.62E-2 s -1, A S /A as high as 34.3 1995 – Green Creek (McKnight et al., in review) N uptake in-stream and in-hyporheic 1999 – Green Creek (Gooseff) agreement between observed and modeled hyporheic zone concentrations
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Green Creek Overview Photo
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Green Creek, 1995
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Algal Transect Sampling Transect Stream Guage Approximately 50 m N Lake Fryxell Green Creek GCT1 GCT0 GCT2 GCT3 GCT4 Topographic map of Green Creek, Antarctica
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GC Stream Cl Concentrations (mg L -1 ) Hour of 06-Jan-99 GC59GC161 GC257GC357 Green Creek 1999
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GC Storage Cl Concentrations (mg L -1 ) GC59GC161 GC257GC357 Hour of 06-Jan-99 Green Creek 1999
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permafrost saturated wetted zone active layer B A Frozen infiltration from previous season
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permafrost active layer More active, faster exchanging hyporheic zone Less active, slower exchanging wetted zone Hypothesis: The wetted zones surrounding the streams can be partitioned into 2 storage zones.
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Tracer Approach Needs to be long term Chemical tracer experiments Pro: transient characterization of hyporheic exchange Con: has to be short term because extreme changes in flow over the long term logistically difficult in Dry Valleys pristine, protected ecosystem no long term releases Solution: stable isotopes !
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Stable Isotopes of Water “Isotopes are atoms of the same element that have different numbers of neutrons.” Common isotopic tracers in hydrology: Deuterium (symbolized “D”, with 2 neutrons) 18 O (Oxygen with 2 additional neutrons) Expressed as a ratio of different to normal:
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Stable Isotopes of Water (cont.’) Terminology: – “permil”, symbolized units: ‰ “lighter”, “depleted” ratios have a more negative value -180 ‰ is very “depleted” compared to –20 ‰ “heavier”, “enriched” ratios have a more positive value 20 ‰ is “heavier” than -2 ‰
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Isobalance D and 18 O values define a meteoric water line, GMWL: D=(8* 18 O)+10 SMOW GMWL enriched, heavy depleted, lighter
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Fractionation Fractionation is a change in the isotopic ratio In water that can occur from: Evaporation: lighter isotopes evaporate, remaining water gets enriched Freezing: 2 - 3‰ increase in 18 O, 15 - 20 ‰ increase in D for ice relative to water
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Modeling Equations Transient Storage model developed by Bencala and Walters, 1983 storage zone advection stream dispersion transient storage 1 o loss storage lossexchange
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d = D – (8* 18 O)
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1999-00 Sampling Evaporation Pan experiment 6.5 hours Sampled hourly for isotopes and chemistry Green Creek synoptics Sample stream and storage zones for isotopes and chemistry
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d = D – (8* 18 O)
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Instream WellWell AWell B Left Hand Bank 2 m 4 m
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Summary of Sampling Travel Time (hr) D fractionation rate (‰ hr -1 ) % fract. evap. % fract. mixing Evap. Exp. 6.5+0.471000 Delta St. (18-Jan-94) 24+0.38100?0? Green Cr. (07-Dec-99) 2.46+3.2214.685.4 Green Cr. (21-Dec-99) 0.5+3.9511.988.1 Green Cr. (07-Jan-00) 2.3+1.3135.964.1
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Conclusions of 1999-00 sampling Sub-surface water is generally more enriched Exchange of wetted zone water happens over several weeks Sub-stream hyporheic zone seems to be a mixing zone between old and new water Evidence from isotopes looks promising, but how do we model this?!?
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Considering the entire wetted zone area in cross section A TOTAL = A S,1 + A S,2 storage 1 storage 2 A S,1 A S,2 22 11 Conceptually, we can then model a nested storage zone:
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Modeling Approach Use Transient Storage model with nested storage zone: storage zone 1 storage zone 2 stream
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Acknowledgements NSF Office of Polar Programs Ethan Chatfield, Jon Mason, and Harry House – field work Antarctic Support Associates and PHI Helicopters for logistical support
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Gratuitous Penguin Photo
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