The annual cycle of heat content and mechanical stability of hypersaline Deep Lake,Vestfold Hills,Antarctica |
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Authors: | J. M. Ferris H. R. Burton |
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Affiliation: | (1) Antarctic Division, Channel Highway, Department of Science, 7050 Kingston, Tasmania, Australia |
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Abstract: | Deep Lake, a hypersaline lake of about ten times seawater concentration, rarely freezes and is characterized by a monomictic thermal cycle, Winter circulation, at c. –17 °C, lasts for two to three months. In summer, epilimnetic temperatures from 7–11 °C result in large vertical thermal gradients (21–26 °C) which combine with the enhanced rate of density change per degree Celsius, accompanying such high salt concentration, to produce a particularly stable density configuration in Deep Lake (Schmidt stability c. 8000 g-cm cm–2; 0.785 J cm–2). The Birgean annual heat budget (c. 24500 cal cm–2; 102.7 103 J cm–2) is comparable to that of a temperate lake with a similar mean depth, despite the comparatively high ratio of Birgean wind work to annual heat budget (0.37 g-cm cal–1). Deep lake retains c. 50% of the incident solar radiation during the short summer heating period; within the range estimated for first class lakes in North America. Extended daylight hours certainly contribute to the high maximum rate of heating in the lake (444 cal cm–2 day–1; 1.86 103 J cm–2 day–1). Deep Lake cools at a rate less than half its average heating rate. Partitioning the total stability into thermal and saline components shows that salinity can contribute up to c. 20% of the maximum summer Schmidt stability. In early summer, the effect of small melt-streams is to increase stability by diluting the epilimnion. In autumn, evaporative water loss can overtake this effect, creating small de-stabilizing salinity gradients. The usually short-term stabilizing influence of snowfall and drift is less predictable, but is probably more common in winter when strong winds are most frequent.Hypersalinity has a profound effect on the physical cycle of Deep Lake, through freezing point depression and the increased rate of density change with temperature. These changes affect the lake's biota, both in relation to osmotic stress, and by effectively exposing them to a more thermally extreme environment. A comparison between Deep Lake and a smaller lake of similar salinity (Lake Hunazoko, Skarvs Nes), demonstrates that it is inappropriate to consider the biological effects of salinity in isolation. The smaller lake offers warmer epilimnetic conditions for at least part of the summer, which may explain the much greater limnetic algal production in Lake Hunazoko. |
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Keywords: | heat budget stability saline lake Vestfold Hills Antarctica |
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