Volcanic carbon cycling in East Lake, Newberry Volcano, Oregon, USA
Author(s) -
Hilary Brumberg,
Lena R. Capece,
Christina Cauley,
P. Tartell,
Craig B. Smith,
Mayke Wagner,
Johan C. Varekamp
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
geology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.609
H-Index - 215
eISSN - 1943-2682
pISSN - 0091-7613
DOI - 10.1130/g48388.1
Subject(s) - volcano , crater lake , geology , carbon cycle , impact crater , hydrothermal circulation , dissolved organic carbon , volcanic gases , oceanography , geochemistry , hydrothermal vent , carbon dioxide , flux (metallurgy) , hydrology (agriculture) , ecosystem , paleontology , ecology , physics , materials science , geotechnical engineering , astronomy , metallurgy , biology
The carbon cycle in East Lake (Newberry Volcano, Oregon, USA) is fueled by volcanic CO2 inputs with traces of Hg and H2S. The CO2 dissolves in deep lake waters and is removed in shallow waters through largely diffusive surface degassing and photosynthesis. Escaping gas and photosynthate have low δ13C values, leading to δ13C(DIC) (DIC—dissolved inorganic carbon) as high as +5.7‰ in surface waters, well above the common global lake range. A steep δ13C depth gradient is further established by respiration and absorption of light volcanic CO2 in bottom waters. The seasonal CO2 degassing starts at >100 t CO2/day after ice melting in the spring and declines to ~40 t/day in late summer, degassing ~11,700 t CO2/yr. Thus, volcano monitoring through gas fluxes from crater lakes should consider lacustrine processes that modulate the volcanic gas output over time. The flux contribution of a bubbling CO2 “hotspot” increased from 20% to >90% of the lake-wide CO2 flux from 2015 to 2019 CE, followed by a “toxic gas alert” in July 2020. East Lake is an active volcanic lake with a “geogenic” ecosystem driven primarily by hydrothermal inputs.
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