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Evidence for regional climate change in the recent evolution of a high latitude pro-glacial lake

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 May 2004

Jenny Webster
Affiliation:
Institute of Environmental Science and Research Ltd, Private Bag 92 021, Auckland, New Zealand
Ian Hawes
Affiliation:
National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research Ltd, Po Box 8602, Christchurch, New Zealand
Malcolm Downes
Affiliation:
National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research Ltd, Po Box 8602, Christchurch, New Zealand
Michael Timperley
Affiliation:
Institute of Environmental Science and Research Ltd, Private Bag 92 021, Auckland, New Zealand
Clive Howard-Williams
Affiliation:
National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research Ltd, Po Box 8602, Christchurch, New Zealand

Abstract

Lake Wilson, a perennially ice-capped, deep (>100 m) lake at 80°S in southern Victoria Land was investigated in January 1993. Water chemistry and physical structure showed three distinct layers; an upper c. 35 m mixed layer of low salinity, moderately turbid water; a less turbid mid layer, 20 m thick of slightly higher salinity and supersaturated with oxygen; and a deep 20 m brackish layer (conductivity c. 4000 μS cm−1) with anoxic conditions in the lower 5 m. Extreme supersaturation of N2O (up to 400 times air saturation) together with high nitrate concentration (4000 mg m−3) was recorded in the deep layer. Phytoplankton biomass and photosynthetic activity was confined to the upper mixed layer and the band of supersaturated dissolved oxygen located at 40–55 m appears to represent a relict layer from when the lake level was lower. The evidence from a comparison of profiles between 1975 and 1993 suggests that Lake Wilson has risen 25 m since 1975, synchronous with a period of lake level rise in the McMurdo Dry Valleys lakes to the north at 77°S. Geochemical diffusion models indicate that Lake Wilson had evaporated to a smaller brine lake about 1000 yrs BP, which also fits the pattern shown by the McMurdo Dry Valleys lakes. Climate changes influencing lake levels have thus covered a wide area of southern Victoria Land.

Type
Papers—Life Sciences and Oceanography
Copyright
© Antarctic Science Ltd 1996

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