Arctic Permafrost Thawing Enhances Sulfide Oxidation

Author:

Kemeny Preston Cosslett12ORCID,Li Gen K.23ORCID,Douglas Madison2ORCID,Berelson William4,Chadwick Austin J.2ORCID,Dalleska Nathan F.2ORCID,Lamb Michael P.2,Larsen William5ORCID,Magyar John S.2ORCID,Rollins Nick E.4,Rowland Joel6ORCID,Smith M. Isabel4ORCID,Torres Mark A.5ORCID,Webb Samuel M.7,Fischer Woodward W.2,West A. Joshua4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of the Geophysical Sciences The University of Chicago Chicago IL USA

2. Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences California Institute of Technology Pasadena CA USA

3. Department of Earth Science University of California Santa Barbara Santa Barbara CA USA

4. Department of Earth Sciences University of Southern California Los Angeles CA USA

5. Department of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences Rice University Houston TX USA

6. Earth and Environmental Sciences Division Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos NM USA

7. Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory Menlo Park CA USA

Abstract

AbstractPermafrost degradation is altering biogeochemical processes throughout the Arctic. Thaw‐induced changes in organic matter transformations and mineral weathering reactions are impacting fluxes of inorganic carbon (IC) and alkalinity (ALK) in Arctic rivers. However, the net impact of these changing fluxes on the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere (pCO2) is relatively unconstrained. Resolving this uncertainty is important as thaw‐driven changes in the fluxes of IC and ALK could produce feedbacks in the global carbon cycle. Enhanced production of sulfuric acid through sulfide oxidation is particularly poorly quantified despite its potential to remove ALK from the ocean‐atmosphere system and increase pCO2, producing a positive feedback leading to more warming and permafrost degradation. In this work, we quantified weathering in the Koyukuk River, a major tributary of the Yukon River draining discontinuous permafrost in central Alaska, based on water and sediment samples collected near the village of Huslia in summer 2018. Using measurements of major ion abundances and sulfate () sulfur (34S/32S) and oxygen (18O/16O) isotope ratios, we employed the MEANDIR inversion model to quantify the relative importance of a suite of weathering processes and their net impact on pCO2. Calculations found that approximately 80% of in mainstem samples derived from sulfide oxidation with the remainder from evaporite dissolution. Moreover, 34S/32S ratios, 13C/12C ratios of dissolved IC, and sulfur X‐ray absorption spectra of mainstem, secondary channel, and floodplain pore fluid and sediment samples revealed modest degrees of microbial sulfate reduction within the floodplain. Weathering fluxes of ALK and IC result in lower values of pCO2 over timescales shorter than carbonate compensation (∼104 yr) and, for mainstem samples, higher values of pCO2 over timescales longer than carbonate compensation but shorter than the residence time of marine (∼107 yr). Furthermore, the absolute concentrations of and Mg2+ in the Koyukuk River, as well as the ratios of and Mg2+ to other dissolved weathering products, have increased over the past 50 years. Through analogy to similar trends in the Yukon River, we interpret these changes as reflecting enhanced sulfide oxidation due to ongoing exposure of previously frozen sediment and changes in the contributions of shallow and deep flow paths to the active channel. Overall, these findings confirm that sulfide oxidation is a substantial outcome of permafrost degradation and that the sulfur cycle responds to permafrost thaw with a timescale‐dependent feedback on warming.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Atmospheric Science,General Environmental Science,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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