Author:
BALKS MEGAN R.,PAETZOLD RON F.,KIMBLE JOHN M.,AISLABIE JACKIE,CAMPBELL IAIN B.
Abstract
Hydrocarbon spills have occurred on Antarctic soils where fuel oils are utilized, moved or stored.
We investigated the effects of hydrocarbon spills on soil temperature and moisture regimes by comparing the
properties of existing oil contaminated sites with those of nearby, uncontaminated, control sites at Scott
Base, the old Marble Point camp, and Bull Pass in the Wright Valley. Hydrocarbon levels were elevated in
fuel-contaminated samples. Climate stations were installed at all three locations in both contaminated and
control sites. In summer at Scott Base and Marble Point the mean weekly maximum near surface (2 cm and
5 cm depth) soil temperatures were warmer (P<0.05), sometimes by more than 10°C, at the contaminated
site than the control sites. At Bull Pass there were no statistically significant differences in near-surface soil
temperatures between contaminated and control soils. At the Scott Base and Marble Point sites soil albedo
was lower, and hydrophobicity was higher, in the contaminated soils than the controls. The higher
temperatures at the Scott Base and Marble Point hydrocarbon contaminated sites are attributed to the
decreased surface albedo due to soil surface darkening by hydrocarbons. There were no noteworthy
differences in moisture retention between contaminated and control sites.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Geology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
60 articles.
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