Abstract
Ionic analyses of snow samples collected from snow pits and cores, and samples of meltwater collected from the only river draining the Norwegian glacier Austre Okstindbreen during the 1995 summer, showed that the input/output relations of sodium and chloride were nearly identical. Sampling at the pits revealed that some 72% of the Na+ and Cl– ions which accumulated in winter drained from the snowpack in early June with the first 12% of the meltwater. Concentrations and loads of the two ions in the first meltwater draining from the glacier in late May were relatively high. There then followed a slight decrease in both the concentrations and the loads of the two ions in samples of the river water, and more-or-less steady levels were present for a long period. In late July, concentrations decreased. Loads decreased in early August, indicating that most of the winter-accumulated ions had drained from the catchment. Input and output calculations for Na+ and C1– indicate a total drainage time for the first meltwater from the uppermost part of the accumulation area of 6–7 weeks, equivalent to an average drainage velocity of 100 md–1.
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