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Evidence for double diffusion in temperate meromictic lakes

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TLDR
In this article, the authors present CTD-measurements from two shallow meromictic mining lakes, which differ in size and depth, show completely different seasonal mixing patterns in their mixolimnia.
Abstract
. We present CTD-measurements from two shallow meromictic mining lakes. The lakes, which differ in size and depth, show completely different seasonal mixing patterns in their mixolimnia. However, the measurements document the occurrence of similar seasonal convective mixing in discrete layers within their monimolimnia. This mixing is induced by double diffusion and can be identified by the characteristic step-like structure of the temperature and electrical conductivity profiles. The steps develop in the upper part of the monimolimnion, when in autumn cooling mixolimnion temperatures have dropped below temperatures of the underlying monimolimnion. The density gradient across the chemocline due to solutes overcompensates the destabilizing temperature gradient, and moreover, keeps the vertical transport close to molecular level. In conclusion, preconditions for double diffusive effects are given on a seasonal basis. At in general high local stabilities N2 in the monimolimnia of 10−4–10−2s−2, the stability ratio Rρ was in the range of 1–20. This quantitatively indicates that double diffusion can become visible. Between 1 and 6 sequent steps, with sizes between 1 dm and 1 m, were visually identified in the CTD-profiles. In the lower monimolimnion of the deeper lake, the steps systematically emerge at a time delay of more than half a year, which matches with the progression of the mixolimnetic temperature changes into the monimolimnion. In none of the lakes, the chemocline interface is degraded by these processes. However, double diffusive convection is essential for the redistribution of solutes in the inner parts of the monimolimnion at longer time scales, which is crucial for the assessment of the ecologic development of such lakes.

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Book ChapterDOI

Stratification, mixing and transport processes in Lake Kivu

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarized the knowledge on mixing and transport processes in Lake Kivu, and showed that the lake is permanently stratified, with density increasing stepwise from ∼998 kg m−3 at the surface to ∼1,002 kg m − 3 at the maximum depth of 485 m.
Book ChapterDOI

Physical Features of Meromictic Lakes: Stratification and Circulation

Abstract: Lakes turn meromictic, when mixing and deep recirculation are insufficient to homogenize the water body and remove chemical gradients. A deepwater layer “the monimolimnion ” is excluded from the deep recirculation and hence develops a pronounced different chemical milieu. It persists through all seasons due to its high density. A limited number of processes are known to accomplish such a density increase of the deep water to create meromixis , such as salty inflows and partial deepwater renewal . However, also geochemical processes, such as decomposition of organic material, iron oxidation, and redissolution and calcite precipitation, can be responsible for meromixis. Other than the overlying water layer “the mixolimnion, ” the monimolimnion does not get into direct contact with the atmosphere and hence is not directly supplied with oxygen. Other substances can be enriched by precipitation and flocculation from the mixolimnion until the solubility product is reached or gas pressure grows beyond absolute pressure. As a consequence, the composition of solutes deviates clearly from usual water composition, and quantitative approaches for density must implement appropriate numerical approaches. The permanent density stratification limits the vertical transport of water and solutes. In several lakes, double-diffusive convection has been reported to significantly enhance the vertical solute transport.
Journal ArticleDOI

The unique environment of the most acidified permanently meromictic lake in the Czech Republic

TL;DR: In this paper, changes in the water properties and biological characteristics of the highly acidic Hromnice Lake (Western Bohemia) were investigated and the absence of spring mixolimnetic turnover due to ice melting and very slow heat propagation through the chemocline with a 6-month delay were observed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rapid physicochemical changes in the high Arctic Lake Kongressvatn caused by recent climate change

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured water chemistry and temperature from 2005 to 2010 in Kongressvatn, a crenogenic meromictic lake in Spitsbergen (Svalbard).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Effective diffusivities within oceanic thermohaline staircases

TL;DR: In this paper, a scale for the thickness of layers in regular "diffusive"-type thermohaline staircases, derived from dimensional analysis, is found to collapse oceanic data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Temperature steps in Lake Kivu: a bottom heated saline lake

TL;DR: In this paper, vertical profiles of temperature microstructure in Lake Kivu were obtained with mini-microstructure recorders developed by C.S. Cox and William Johnson at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, revealing three depth intervals containing many isothermal layers typically 0.25-2 m thick and of increasing temperature increments 0.01-0.03°C from layer to layer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Double-diffusive convection in Lake Nyos, Cameroon

TL;DR: In this article, a temperature time series measured at 62 m depth indicates that the double-diffusive convection started in the second half of March 2002, when a set of 26 well-mixed layers with thicknesses of 0.2-2.1 m and sharp interfaces in between were discovered at 53-74 m depth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stability and meromixis in a water‐filled mine pit

TL;DR: In this paper, a field experiment examined stability and stratification in a disused mine filled with 1.75 X lo7 m3 of water, and the available data suggest that groundwater inflow created a warm salty pool of water at the base of the water column, giving the appearance of a meromictic structure with a monimolimnion.
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