4.7 Article

Trace element, rare earth element and trace carbon compounds in Subglacial Lake Whillans, West Antarctica

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 892, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.164480

Keywords

Lake water; Porewater; Redox conditions; West Antarctica; SLW; REE; TE; Amino acids; Phenolic compounds

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This study reports the geochemical characteristics of Whillans Subglacial Lake (SLW) in West Antarctica using direct sampling technology. The results show clear changes in rare earth element concentrations and redox sensitive trace element concentrations in sediment porewaters, indicating the existence of a complex and dynamic geochemical system beneath the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. The study also highlights the importance of subglacial lakes as unique environments for microbial life and natural biogeochemical cycles, as well as their impact on basal hydrology and ice flow variations.
Whillans Subglacial Lake (SLW) lies beneath 801 m of ice in the lower portion of the Whillans Ice Stream (WIS) in West Antarctica and is part of an extensive and active subglacial drainage network. Here, the geochemical characterization of SLW rare earth elements (REE), trace elements (TE), free amino acids (FAA), and phenolic compounds (PC) measured in lakewater and sediment porewater are reported. The results show, on average, higher values of REEs in the lakewater than in the porewater, and clear changes in all REE concentrations and select redox sensitive trace element concentrations in porewaters at a depth of similar to 15 cm in the 38 cm lake sediment core. This is consistent with prior results on the lake sediment redox conditions based on gas chemistry and microbiological data. Low concentrations of vanillyl phenols were measured in the SLW water column with higher concentrations in porewater samples and their concentration profiles in the sediments may also reflect changing redox conditions in the sediments. Vanillin concentrations increased with depth in the sediments as oxygenation decreases, while the concentrations of vanillic acid, the more oxidized component, were higher in the more oxygenated surface sediments. Collectively these results indicate redox changes occurring with the upper 38 cm of sediment in SLW and provide support for the existence of a seawater source, already hypothesized, in the sediments below the lowest measured depth, and of a complex and dynamic geochemical system beneath the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. Our results are the first to detail geochemical properties from an Antarctic subglacial environment using direct sampling technology. Due to their isolation from the wider environment, subglacial lakes represent one of our planets last pristine environments that provide habitats for microbial life and natural biogeochemical cycles but also impact the basal hydrology and can cause ice flow variations.

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