Abstract
Bacterial populations found in subglacial meltwaters and basal ice are
comparable to those in the active layer of permafrost and orders of
magnitude larger than those found in ice cores from large ice sheets.
Populations increase with sediment concentration, and 5%–24% of the
bacteria are dividing or have just divided, suggesting that the
populations are active. These findings (1) support inferences from
recent studies of basal ice and meltwater chemistry that microbially
mediated redox reactions may be important at glacier beds, (2) challenge
the view that chemical weathering in glacial environments arises from
purely inorganic reactions, and (3) raise the possibilities that redox
reactions are a major source of protons consumed in subglacial
weathering and that these reactions may be the dominant proton source
beneath ice sheets where meltwaters are isolated from an atmospheric
source of CO2. Microbial mediation may increase the rate of
sulfide oxidation under subglacial conditions, a suggestion supported by
the results of simple weathering experiments. If subglacial bacterial
populations can oxidize and ferment organic carbon, it is important to
reconsider the fate of soil organic carbon accumulated under
interglacial conditions in areas subsequently overridden by Pleistocene
ice sheets.
Translated title of the contribution | Bacterial populations at glacier beds and their relationship to rock weathering and carbon cycling |
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Original language | English |
Pages (from-to) | 107-110 |
Number of pages | 4 |
Journal | Geology |
Volume | 27 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1999 |