Friday, January 9, 2009

Tracer Experiment

Well, we finally made it out to the field. The weather at McMurdo has been very patchy. There's been snow and a lot of clouds. But, the weather out in the Dry Valleys has been very nice. So, once they finally had a short window of time to get us out, we left McMurdo and have been staying in the Valleys ever since in some beautiful, sunny weather. Katie and Elizabeth made it out to Lake Fryxell on Wednesday afternoon. Ross and I made it out to Lake Bonney on Thursday afternoon.

At Lake Bonney, Ross and I were working on an experiment that traced the movement of water from melting permafrost flowing over the soil. Permafrost is soil and rock in the ground that stays permanently frozen year-round. It usually is found below the soil surface in cold places like Antarctica and the Arctic. During the summer in the dry valleys, the permafrost will melt a little bit, causing wet patches to appear in the soil. You can see those darker, wet patches of soil in this picture at Bonney:Because it's been so warm this year, the permafrost below the soil has been melting a lot more than usual. At one of our research sites at Bonney, that meltwater has reach the surface (kind of like a spring you might find in the mountains in the US). There's so much meltwater that it ended up forming a stream that flows all the way down to the lake, straight through some long-term sampling plots we set up years ago! (Our team nickname in McMurdo is the Wormherders. Because the stream flows through one of our plots, it is called Wormherder Creek.) Instead of being upset that our plots are ruined, we're using the opportunity to learn about sources of water in the dry valleys and how they influence the soil.

On Thursday, we soil ecologists teamed up with a group of stream ecologists to study how the new Wormherder Creek interacts with the soil to influence soil chemistry and organisms. We added chemicals containing lithium and bromide high up on Wormherder Creek, and we followed how those chemicals moved down the stream and through the soil. There were two people at the top of the creek at the chemical injection site running the pump. Then, there were scientists stationed at regular intervals down the stream collecting samples every 5 or 10 minutes. I was stationed higher up on the creek with Uffe. In this video, you see Uffe labeling the bottle to take the next sample. That bottle gets dipped into the stream flow to be filled with water. You can see another scientist, Anna, further down the stream at the next station. You can also see how fast that meltwater is moving! It's a small creek, but there's a good bit of water in it! The tube next to the orange flag is called a piezometer, which is how we extract ground water from below the surface.


We collected a lot of surface water, ground water, and soil samples for several hours through the night. We will look for the presence and concentration of the chemicals we released high up in the stream so that we can follow how the water moved down to the lake. We will also measure the chemistry of the water and soil, and look at what kinds of organisms we find in various locations, to see how those important properties are influenced by the presence of Wormherder Creek. It was a loooong night, but we finished it!

After we left Lake Bonney late Thursday night, Ross headed to Fryxell to be with Katie and Elizabeth. I have been back at F6 (across the lake from the rest of the group) working on the stoichiometry plots that we treated last week. Hopefully I will be heading back to Lake Bonney tomorrow, but the weather does not look good in McMurdo, so the helicopters may not be able to come get me! Keep your fingers crossed, because I have samples to get back to the lab!

1 comment:

  1. Here are some more great questions from my friends at Thetford Elementary School:

    Q: Other than nematodes, what other microscopic organisms are you finding under those hula cones?
    A: There are a variety of microscopic organisms in the soil here. Of course there are nematodes. There are also animals called rotifers, tardigrades, collembola, and mites. There are also a lot of bacteria and fungi that live in the soil. These are all animals that I will blog about soon!

    Q: How often are you right on target with the GPS, not 10 meters away?
    A: We are very rarely right on target with the GPS. Usually the GPS gets you within a few meters, and you can then look for evidence of your site, such as footprints or holes that you dug. GPS's always have a little bit of error, so it will not take you to the exact same spot each time.

    Q: What's the temperatire been like lately down there?
    A: Recently it's been a bit chilly down here. We've had a few storms, with lots of cloud cover and a little bit of snow. When it's windy and the sun isn't out, it gets rather chilly! Today it was -2°C (28°F), but -8°C (18°F) with the wind chill.


    Q: What were some of the musical instruments being played at the Icestock?
    A: The bands I saw at Icestock used instruments that included guitars, bass guitars, drums, banjos, harmonicas and fiddles. There were many bands that I didn't see (it was cold outside!!), and they may have used other instruments.

    Q: Here is another of Owen's math problems:
    There were 93 gingerbread houses that Becky and her friends made. When noonne was looking Becky and Katie ate some of the houses. When they counted again there were 48 gingerbread houses left. How many did Becky and Katie eat?
    A: Katie and I must have eaten 45 gingerbread houses. And then we were very full!

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