Thermal stratification and the stability of meromixis in the Pretoria Salt Pan,South Africa |
| |
Authors: | P. J. Ashton F. R. Schoeman |
| |
Affiliation: | (1) National Institute for Water Research, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, P.O. Box 395, 0001 Pretoria, South Africa |
| |
Abstract: | The Pretoria Salt Pan, South Africa, a small (0.076 km2), shallow (Zmax = 2.85 m), hypersaline, maar lake, lies within a clearly-defined crater and is fed by a perennial, slightly saline (3 g l-1) artesian spring. The lake has two distinct solar-heated peaks in its temperature profile, each of these peaks located in a highly turbid (>80 JTU) layer below a steep chemocline. The upper thermal peak, located at a depth of 10 cm, was transient, with a distinct diel pattern of diurnal heating and nocturnal cooling. The lower thermal peak, located below a steep chemocline and centred at approximately 60 cm, was stable and showed a seasonal pattern of winter heating (maximum: 38.5°C) and summer cooling (minimum: 27.4°C). The unusual bathymetry of the lake, combined with the sheltering effect of the crater rim and steep salinity gradient between the surface (30–80 g l-1) and bottom water (280–310 g l-1) prevented windmixing of surface waters beyond a depth of approximately 50 cm. During a 28 month study all water deeper than 55 cm remained anaerobic, and the lake appeared to be meromictic. |
| |
Keywords: | Saline lake meromictic stratification chemocline |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|