4.7 Article

Controls of lithium isotope spatial variability across the Yukon River: Implications for weathering processes in a warming subarctic basin

Journal

GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA
Volume 323, Issue -, Pages 1-19

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2022.02.016

Keywords

Lithium isotopes; Weathering; Permafrost; Glaciers; Yukon River

Funding

  1. National Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) Discovery Grant [RGPIN-2019-05709]
  2. National Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) Northern Research Supplement [RGPIN-2019-05709]
  3. Arctic-YukonKuskokwim Sustainable Salmon Initiative

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This study explores the relationship between weathering processes and permafrost cover in the Yukon River basin. The findings reveal different weathering characteristics in different regions, with higher carbonate weathering contribution in glaciated mountainous zones and more significant silicate weathering in floodplains covered by continuous permafrost. The unique history of Pleistocene glaciations in the basin also influences weathering processes. These findings have important implications for future water quality in the warming basin.
With ongoing global warming and permafrost thawing, weathering processes will change on the Yukon River, with risks for water quality and ecosystem sustainability. Here, we explore the relationship between weathering processes and permafrost cover using elemental concentration and strontium and lithium isotopic data in the dissolved load of 102 samples collected during the summer across most major tributaries of the Yukon River. The Yukon River basin is dominated by silicate weathering with a high contribution from young volcanic rock units. In glaciated mountainous zones, we observe higher carbonate weathering contribution, low Li/Na ratios and low delta Li-7 values (< 15 parts per thousand & nbsp;). In these areas, the high denudation rate and high supply of fresh minerals associated with alpine glaciers favor congruent silicate weathering, and sulfide oxidation accelerates carbonate weathering. In floodplains covered by continuous permafrost, we observe a high carbonate weathering contribution, relatively high Li/Na ratios, and low delta Li-7 values (~& nbsp;18 parts per thousand). We argue that the minimal water-rock interactions in this setting inhibit silicate weathering and favor congruent weathering of easily weatherable minerals (i.e., carbonates). Conversely, in areas with discontinuous or sporadic permafrost, we observe a dominance of silicate weathering, with higher and more variable Li/Na ratios and high delta Li-7 values (11-33 parts per thousand). In this setting, longer water-rock interactions combined with the high supply of fresh minerals from mountain zones favor more incongruent weathering. The unique history of Pleistocene glaciations on the Yukon River basin also influences weathering processes. Many areas of the basin were never glaciated during the Pleistocene, and rivers draining those regions have higher delta Li-7 values suggesting more incongruent weathering associated with deeper flow paths and longer water residence time in the regolith. Our work underlines that water-rock interactions, including active layer weathering and groundwater inputs, are highly dependent on climate conditions and glacial processes across the Yukon River basin, with key implications for future water quality in this warming basin. Crown Copyright (C) 2022 Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.& nbsp;

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