对雪中盐水向上迁移的染色追踪

IF 2.5 4区 地球科学 Q2 GEOGRAPHY, PHYSICAL Annals of Glaciology Pub Date : 2024-09-19 DOI:10.1017/aog.2024.27
Robbie Mallett, Vishnu Nandan, Julienne Stroeve, Rosemary Willatt, Monojit Saha, John Yackel, Gaëlle Veysière, Jeremy Wilkinson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

盐通常存在于季节性海冰上覆的积雪中,具有深远的热力学和电磁效应。然而,盐在雪中的来源和行为仍不确定。我们介绍了两项追踪盐水在雪中向上运动的研究:一项在实验室进行,另一项在野外进行。实验室实验是在陆地雪样的底部加入染色盐水,然后测量随后的吸水情况。我们的野外实验是在裸露的海冰和湖冰表面直接添加染料(不加盐水),然后在上面积雪数天。在海冰上,随着雪的基底层含盐量增加,染料向上迁移到雪中达 5 厘米,而在非盐湖冰上进行的对照实验中,染料没有发生迁移。这种情况发生在相对干燥的雪堆中,盐水占据了雪堆计算孔隙体积的6%,这表明盐分向上迁移并不需要孔隙饱和。我们的研究结果凸显了微观结构参数的潜在作用,这些参数超出了目前可通过渗透测量法获取的参数,也凸显了对年轻雪堆进行纵向、基于过程的实地研究的潜在价值。
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Dye tracing of upward brine migration in snow

Salt is often present in the snow overlying seasonal sea ice, and has profound thermodynamic and electromagnetic effects. However, its provenance and behaviour within the snow remain uncertain. We describe two investigations tracing upward brine movement in snow: one conducted in the laboratory and one in the field. The laboratory experiments involved the addition of dyed brine to the base of terrestrial snow samples, with subsequent wicking being measured. Our field experiment involved dye being added directly (without brine) to bare sea-ice and lake ice surfaces, with snow then accumulating on top over several days. On the sea ice, the dye migrated upwards into the snow by up to 5 cm as the snow's basal layer became more salty, whereas no migration occurred in our control experiment over non-saline lake ice. This occurred in relatively dry snowpacks where brine took up $< 6\%$ of the snow's calculated pore volume, suggesting pore saturation is not required for upward salt transport. Our results highlight the potential role of microstructural parameters beyond those currently retrievable with penetrometry, and the potential value of longitudinal, process-based field studies of young snowpacks.

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来源期刊
Annals of Glaciology
Annals of Glaciology GEOGRAPHY, PHYSICAL-GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
CiteScore
8.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Annals of Glaciology publishes original scientific articles and letters in selected aspects of glaciology-the study of ice. Each issue of the Annals is thematic, focussing on a specific subject. The Council of the International Glaciological Society welcomes proposals for thematic issues from the glaciological community. Once a theme is approved, the Council appoints an Associate Chief Editor and a team of Scientific Editors to handle the submission, peer review and publication of papers.
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