Published June 23, 2023 | Version 2
Dataset Open

Supplementary Material no. 2 to the manuscript: Reemission of inorganic pollution from permafrost? – a freshwater hydrochemistry study in the lower Kolyma basin (North-East Siberia)

  • 1. The Kazimierz Wielki University in Bydgoszcz
  • 2. Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow & The Kazimierz Wielki University in Bydgoszcz
  • 3. Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow
  • 4. Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań
  • 5. Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin
  • 6. Gdansk University of Technology

Description

A dataset on the inorganic chemistry of permafrost-related creeks and ice, thermokarst lakes and the Kolyma river and its tributaries in late July 2021.
Companion dataset to the manuscript: "Reemission of inorganic pollution from permafrost? – a freshwater hydrochemistry study in the lower Kolyma basin (North-East Siberia)".
Current abstract of the manuscript (prior to peer review):

Permafrost regions are under particular pressure from climate change resulting in widespread landscape changes, which impact also freshwater chemistry. We investigated a snapshot of hydrochemistry in various freshwater environments in the lower Kolyma river basin (North-East Siberia, continuous permafrost zone) to explore the mobility of metals, metalloids and non-metals resulting from permafrost thaw. Particular attention was focused on heavy metals as contaminants potentially released from the secondary source in the permafrozen Yedoma complex. Permafrost creeks represented the Mg-Ca-Na-HCO3-Cl-SO4 ionic water type (with mineralisation in the range 600-800 mg/L), while permafrost ice and thermokarst lake waters were the HCO3-Ca-Mg type. Multiple heavy metals (As, Cu, Co, Mn and Ni) showed much higher dissolved phase concentrations in permafrost creeks and ice than in Kolyma and its tributaries, and only in the permafrost samples and one Kolyma tributary have we detected dissolved Ti or Hg. In thermokarst lakes, several metal and metalloid dissolved concentrations increased with water depth (Fe, Mn, Ni and Zn - in both lakes; Al, Cu, K, Sb, Sr and Pb in either lake), reaching 1370 µg/L Cu, 4610 µg/L Mn, and 687 µg/L Zn in the bottom water layers. Permafrost-related waters were also enriched in dissolved phosphorus (up to 512 µg/L in Yedoma-fed creeks). The impact of permafrost thaw on river and lake water chemistry is a complex problem which needs to be considered both in the context of legacy permafrost shrinkage and the interference of the deepening active layer with newly deposited antropogenic contaminants.

Notes

Please cite article doi: 10.1002/ldr.4866 if using the data included here, as this dataset is part of this published manuscript.

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Additional details

Funding

INTERACT – International Network for Terrestrial Research and Monitoring in the Arctic 262693
European Commission