Geochemistry of snow cover in taiga and alpine permafrost landscapes in Yakutia


https://doi.org/10.15356/2076-6734-2014-1-73-80


Abstract

The work is devoted to results of study the chemical composition of snow in mountain taiga and permafrost landscapes of Yakutia. We studied snow cover in different mountain-belt types of landscapes. The composition and calculated volumes of chemical elements and compounds are studied in snow. The chemical composition of snow in mountain taiga and permafrost landscape has remained relatively constant (hydrocarbonate chloride-bicarbonate or sodium-calcium, low sulfate content). The dominant influence on the chemical composition of snow at plains and mountain permafrost landscapes has a continental origin, mainly carbon compounds. In mountain desert, where there is predominantly regional transfer, along with the carbon significant role in atmospheric precipitation in cold season belongs to the nitrogen compounds, mainly ammonium. The total density of the entry of soluble and insoluble components in the form of snow decreases regularly with change of altitude. The distribution of trace elements in the snow cover is not a subject to altitudinal zonation. The maximum content of heavy metals (Mn, Cu, Pb, Cd), F, and Sr in the snow cover is observed in the landscapes of mountain woodlands and mountain tundra, where the route crossed research Sette-Daban metallogenic zone of stratiform Cu and Pb-Zn mineralization.


About the Author

V. N. Makarov
Institute of Permafrost, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Yakutsk
Russian Federation


References

1. Vasilenko V.N., Nazarov I.M., Fridman Sh.D. Monitoring zagryazneniya snezhnogo pokrova. Monitoring of snow cover contamination. Leningrad: Hydrometeoizdat, 1985: 182 p. [In Russian].

2. Iveronova M.I. Evaporation from snow cover in Terskey Alatau Range in winter 1958/59. Meteorologiya i gidrologiya. Meteorology and Hydrology. 1961, 2: 24–25. [In Russian].

3. Kazurova N.S. Synoptic processes in Yakutia in different seasons and their short characteristics. General information. Voprosy geografii Yakutii. Problems of Yakutia geography. Issue 1. Yakutsk, 1961: 19–26. [In Russian].

4. Klyukin N.K. Klimaticheskiy ocherk Severo-Vostoka SSSR. Climatic essay of North-East of the USSR. Moscow: Hydrometeoizdat, 1960: 118 p. [In Russian].

5. Makarov V.N. Fluorine in snow cover in the Lena-Vilyui interfluves. Nauka i obrazovanie. Science and Education. 2003, 3 (31): 65–69. [In Russian].

6. Makarov V.N., Fedoseev N.F., Fedoseeva V.I. Geochimiya snezhnogo pokrova Yakutii. Geochemistry of snow cover in Yakutia. Yakutsk: Institute of Permafrost, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 1990: 152 p. [In Russian].

7. Merzlotnye landshafty Yakutii. Permafrost landscapes of Yakutia. Explanation to the map of scale1:2 500 000. Novosibirsk: GUGK, 1989: 170 p. [In Russian].

8. Skachkov Yu.B. Trends of changes in extreme of air temperature in Yakutsk city. Nauka i obrazovanie. Science and Education. 2012, 3 (66): 39–41. [In Russian].


Supplementary files

For citation: Makarov V.N. Geochemistry of snow cover in taiga and alpine permafrost landscapes in Yakutia. Ice and Snow. 2014;54(1):73-80. https://doi.org/10.15356/2076-6734-2014-1-73-80

Views: 1718

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2076-6734 (Print)
ISSN 2412-3765 (Online)