Abstract
Submarine groundwater discharge could impact the transport of critical solutes to the ocean. However, its driver(s), significance over geological time scales, and geographical coverage are poorly understood. We characterize a submarine groundwater seep from the continental slope off northern Norway where substantial amount of meteoric water was detected. We reconstruct the seepage history from textural relationships and U-Th geochronology of authigenic minerals. We demonstrate how glacial-interglacial dynamics have promoted submarine groundwater circulation more than 100 km offshore and result in high fluxes of critical solutes to the ocean. Such cryosphere-hydrosphere coupling is likely common in the circum-Arctic implying that future decay of glaciers and permafrost in a warming Arctic is expected to attenuate such a coupled process and thus decreases the export of critical solutes.
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Hong, W. L., Lepland, A., Himmler, T., Kim, J. H., Chand, S., Sahy, D., … Knies, J. (2019). Discharge of Meteoric Water in the Eastern Norwegian Sea since the Last Glacial Period. Geophysical Research Letters, 46(14), 8194–8204. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019GL084237
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