Abstract

Cryoconite, a sediment found on the surface of glaciers, is known for its ability to accumulate radionuclides. New data on cryoconite from the Morteratsch glacier (Switzerland) are presented to shed light on the mechanisms that control the distribution of radioactivity in cryoconite. Among the radionuclides detected in our samples, we have identified 108mAg, an artificial species which has never been observed in terrestrial environments before. This finding supports that cryoconite has an extraordinary ability to accumulate radioactivity. Our results also show that the radioactivity of cryoconite from a single glacier is far from uniform. Both the absolute amount of radioactivity and the relative contribution of single radionuclides are highly variable in samples from the Morteratsch glacier. To investigate the processes responsible for such variability, we have explored the correlation between radionuclides, organic and inorganic carbon fractions and the morphological features of cryoconite deposits. We have found that the degree of connection between cryoconite and supraglacial hydrology is particularly important, since it strongly influences the accumulation of radionuclides in cryoconite. Cryoconite holes connected with supraglacial channels are rich in cosmogenic 7Be; in contrast, poorly connected deposits are rich in artificial fallout radionuclides and elemental carbon. The very different half-lives of 7Be and artificial radionuclides allowed us to discuss our findings in relation to the age and maturity of cryoconite deposits, highlighting the potential use of radionuclides to investigate hydrological supraglacial processes and material cycling at the surface of glaciers.

Highlights

  • 50 Radioactivity is a versatile tool in Earth Sciences, with many diverse applications

  • Analysis of cryoconite from the Morteratsch glacier further supports previous results suggesting that cryoconite has an extraordinary ability to accumulate radionuclides. 108mAg has been detected in three cryoconite samples within this study, representing the first time this artificial radionuclide 445 has been described within terrestrial environments

  • Cryoconite from deposits that are in contact with meltwater channels and are characterized by well-defined granules, are 450 extremely rich in short-lived 7Be (t1/2 53.1 d)

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Summary

Introduction

50 Radioactivity is a versatile tool in Earth Sciences, with many diverse applications. The first glaciological applications of radioactivity date back to the 1960s, when 55 pioneering studies on the development of age scales for snow and ice through the detection of FRN appeared (Picciotto & Wilgain, 1963; Crozaz, et al, 1964). The analysis of the decay rate of natural fallout 210Pb and the identification of radioactive spikes corresponding to nuclear accidents and test explosions have become a routine procedure to date the upper layers of ice cores (Eichler, et al, 2000; Clemenza, et al, 2012). This has been possible because snow and ice, being

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