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The impact of subglacial drainage system evolution and glacier lake outburst on Arctic fjord macronutrient dynamics: Kongsfjorden, Svalbard
  • +16
  • Andreas Alexander,
  • Livia Piermattei,
  • Philipp Assmy,
  • Andrea L. Popp,
  • Nicolas Valiente,
  • Guy David Tallentire,
  • simon Filhol,
  • Thomas Vikhamar Schuler,
  • Ugo Nanni,
  • Jack Kohler,
  • Louise Steffensen Schmidt,
  • Léo Decaux,
  • George Cowie,
  • Allison Bailey,
  • Riko Noormets,
  • Pierre-Marie Lefeuvre,
  • Claire S. Earlie,
  • Maarja Kruusmaa,
  • Andrew Hodson
Andreas Alexander
University of Bergen

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Livia Piermattei
5. Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (WSL)
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Philipp Assmy
Norwegian Polar Institute
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Andrea L. Popp
SMHI
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Nicolas Valiente
University of Castilla-La Mancha
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Guy David Tallentire
Loughborough University
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simon Filhol
Dept. of Geosciences, University of Oslo
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Thomas Vikhamar Schuler
University of Oslo
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Ugo Nanni
Geoscience department, Univ. of Oslo
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Jack Kohler
Norwegian Polar Institute
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Louise Steffensen Schmidt
University of Oslo
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Léo Decaux
University of Silesia in Katowice, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Institute of Earth Sciences
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George Cowie
University of Oslo
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Allison Bailey
Norwegian Polar Institute
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Riko Noormets
The University Centre in Svalbard
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Pierre-Marie Lefeuvre
Norwegian Polar Institute
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Claire S. Earlie
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
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Maarja Kruusmaa
Tallinn University of Technology
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Andrew Hodson
University Centre in Svalbard
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Abstract

Rapid warming in the Arctic leads to increased glacier melt and freshwater runoff, especially from tidewater glaciers. Here, runoff enters the fjord at depth; induces upwelling and enhances macronutrient delivery to the fjords. However, most studies have low temporal resolutions and so the effects of low-frequency, high-amplitude events on the marine environment remain poorly known. Here, we combine glacier observations with fjord and glacier lake sampling to describe the impact of the 2021 glacier lake outburst flood (GLOF) from lake Setevatnet into Kongsfjorden (Svalbard). We demonstrate the importance of changing subglacial conditions and examine their effects upon macronutrient availability in the inner fjord. Our observations reveal that direct nutrient subsidy from the glacier is most important in early summer, providing critical nitrate (NO3-) and silicate following the routing of meltwater through an inefficient drainage system. Increasing quantities of ice melt force the establishment of an efficient drainage system, creating a plume in the inner fjord, and resulting in upwelling of nutrient-rich bottom water. When the sudden drainage of a glacier lake with high NO3- concentrations occurred, it left little imprint on the NO3- content of the inner fjord, and instead induced seasonal maximum nitrite (NO2-) concentrations. This outcome implies that NO3- was removed by denitrification at the glacier bed and its product NO2- was discharged by the flood waters into the inner fjord. Our findings show that the delivery of key, productivity-limiting nutrients from tidewater glaciers not only depends on runoff, but also on characteristics of the glacier drainage system.
15 Dec 2023Submitted to ESS Open Archive
27 Dec 2023Published in ESS Open Archive