Go Back Research Article June, 2020

Biomass-Derived Provenance Dominates Glacial Surface Organic Carbon in the Western Himalaya

Abstract

The origin, transport pathway, and spatial variability of total organic carbon (OC) in the western Himalayan glaciers are poorly understood compared to those of black carbon (BC) and dust, but it is critically important to evaluate the climatic role of OC in the region. By applying the distribution of OC activation energy; 14C activity; and radiogenic isotopes of 208Pb/204Pb, 207Pb/204Pb, and 206Pb/204Pb in glacial debris and atmospheric particulate matter (PM10 size fraction), we demonstrate that 98.3 ± 1.6 and 1.7 ± 1.6% of OC in western Himalayan glaciers are derived from biomass and petrogenic sources, respectively. The δ13C and N/C composition indicates that the biomass is a complex mixture of C3 vegetation and autochthonous photoautotrophic input modified by heterotrophic microbial activity. The data set reveals that the studied western Himalayan glacier has negligible contributions from fossil-fuel-derived particles, which contrasts to the central and eastern Himalayan glaciers that have significant contributions from fossil fuel sources. We show that this spatial variability of OC sources relates to regional differences in air mass transport pathways and precipitation regimes over the Himalaya. Moreover, our observation suggests that biomass-derived carbon could be the only primary driver of carbon-induced glacier melting in the western Himalaya.

Keywords

Total Organic Carbon Organic Carbon Transport Western Himalayan Glaciers Black Carbon Dust Deposition Atmospheric Particulate Matter PM10 OC Activation Energy Radiogenic Isotopes Lead Isotopes 14C Dating Biomass Contribution Petrogenic Sources δ13C Composition N/C Ratio C3 Vegetation Photoautotrophic Input Heterotrophic Microbial Activity Fossil Fuel Contribution Air Mass Transport Pathways Precipitation Regimes Glacier Melting Climate Impact Carbon-Induced Melting Spatial Variability Himalayan Glaciers Atmospheric Deposition Environmental Isotopes Cryosphere Studies Regional Climate Change
Document Preview
Download PDF
Details
Volume 54
Issue 14
Pages 8612-8621
ISSN 1520-5851
Impact Metrics