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Water Resources Engineering

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Title: Water Resources Engineering


1
LIVE INTERACTIVE LEARNING _at_ YOUR DESKTOP
The McMurdo Dry Valleys of Antarctica harshest
place on Earth or a polar oasis? Presented by
Dr. Cristina Vesbach, Dr. Michael Gooseff, and
Dr. Jeb Barrett
Thursday, May 13, 2010
2
The McMurdo Dry Valleys of Antarctica harshest
place on Earth or a polar oasis?
3
Overview
Dr. Cristina VesbachUniv. of New Mexico
Dr. Michael Gooseff Penn State Univ.
Dr. Jeb Barrett Virginia Tech
4
Poll question
  • Antarctica is completely covered by snow and ice
  • v) Yes
  • X) No

5
Not what you think
6
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7
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8
Monochrome Landscape
  • Victoria Valley, December 2006

9
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12
Dry Valley Research
  • The Discovery Expedition (1902)
  • International Geophysical Year (1959)
  • The McMurdo LTER (1994)
  • Wall, McKnight, Fountain, Lyons, Priscu,
    Virginia, Doran, Wharton
  • Many others
  • Hall, Hendy, Denton, Green, Vincent, Hawes,
    Howard-Williams, Laybourn-Parry

13
Dry Valleys hydrologic cycle
Precipitation
14
Dry Valleys hydrologic cycle
Precipitation
Melt
15
Dry Valleys hydrologic cycle
Precipitation
Melt
Runoff
16
Dry Valleys hydrologic cycle
Precipitation
Melt
Runoff
EvaporationSublimation
17
Seasonal snow cycle
18
Seasonal snow cycle
19
Snow ablation (melt sublimation)
29 Oct 1999
20
Snow ablation (melt sublimation)
06 Nov 1999
21
Snow ablation (melt sublimation)
13 Nov 1999
22
Snow ablation (melt sublimation)
22 Nov 1999
23
Snow ablation (melt sublimation)
08 Dec 1999
24
Snow ablation (melt sublimation)
04 Jan 2000
25
Stream flow comes from glaciersGreen Creek
short stream
Canada Glacier
Green Creek
Lake Fryxell
26
Longest record from the longest river Onyx River
N
Lower Wright Gauge (LWRT) (1972-today) Low Flow
1978 Missing 1987, 1988, 1992
Vanda Gauge (1969-today) Low Flow 1978 (NO
flow) Missing 1992, 1994, 1995
27
Longest record from the longest river Onyx River
28
Longest record from the longest river Onyx River
29
Longest record from the longest river Onyx River
30
Longest record from the longest river Onyx River
Gooseff et al., 2007, ISAES
31
Lake levels are integrators of hydrologic
processes
Lake Bonney - January, 2006
Barrett et al., 2009, GCB
32
Lake levels are integrators of hydrologic
processes
33
Evaporation/Sublimation
Measured rate 6.17 mm/d
Gooseff et al., 2003, HP
34
Where do you find wet soil?
35
Poll Question
  • The closed basin lakes in the Dry Valleys
    maintain their water levels by stream water
    inflow and losses of water through
  • A) precipitation
  • B) melting ice cover
  • C) evaporation
  • D) none of the above

36
  • Lets Pause for Questions

37
Dry Valleys Habitats
38
Habitats
39
Glaciers
40
Cryoconite Holes
41
Blood Falls
42
Blood Falls
43
Streams
44
Theres life in them thar streams!
45
Lakes
46
Lakes
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49
Lake Ice
50
Lakes-water column
Solutes increase down stream, from glaciers to
streams to lakes. Salt dissolution Mineral
weathering Evaporative concentration Cryo-concen
tration
2006-07 data
51
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52
Ice
53
Plankton
54
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55
Microbial Mats
56
Pause for your questions
57
Dry Valley Soil Environments
58
Soils of the McMurdo Dry Valleys
  • Cold
  • Dry
  • Saline
  • Poorly weathered
  • Low organic matter

59
Patterned ground formations near Commonwealth
Glacier, Taylor Valley, Antarctica
60
Patterned ground formations on Spritzbergen
Island, Norway
61
Heterogeneity of Antarctic Soil Environments is
Driven By Water and Surface Exposure Age.
62
High and Dry Environments Have Oldest Surface
Exposure Ages on Earth.
Up to 3 NO3-N by wt.
63
Antarctic soils are a model system for
understanding life in extreme environments
analog for Martian soils
64
We have seen no living thing, not even a moss or
a lichen all that we did find, was the
skeleton of a Weddell seal, and how it came there
is beyond guessing Robert F. Scott, 1903
65
Antarctic Food Webs Are Simple (lower biomass
and diversity than non-polar ecosystems)
Eudorylaimus antarcticus
Tardigrades (Water Bears)
Scottenema lindsayae
Rotifers
Antarcticas nematodes are the equivalent of
elephants and lions - E.O. Wilson
Algae
Microbial Community
66
What controls distribution of biodiversity in
Antarctica?
Response to climate variation?
67
Poll Question
Whats going on with Antarctic climate? A) no
observed change B) warming C) cooling
68
Recent Antarctic Climate Change Includes Examples
of Warming and Cooling
1986-2006
Source NASA/GISS 2007
69
West Antarctica (including the Peninsula) Have
Experienced Significant Warming Since mid-20th
Century
Antarctic Peninsula 2.0 C since 1950 0.4
C/decade (Vaughan et al. 2001)
70
East Antarctica, including The McMurdo Dry
Valleys Experienced A Cold Period Between 1986
and 2002
  • Cooling temperatures led to
  • Increased ice-thickness on lakes
  • Decreased stream flow
  • Decreased aquatic NPP

Annual -0.7oC/decade Summer -1.2oC/decade
Doran et al. 2002. Nature
71
20th Cent. Lake Levels Rise Provides Evidence of
Regional Warming.
R.F. Scott Expedition 1906 A. G.
Fountain PSU 2006
72
Regional Cooling Has Been Linked To Ozone Loss
(Thompson and Solomon 2002
What happens has ozone levels recover?
73
What Regions of Antarctica Have Exhibited the
Most Significant Warming?
A) The McMurdo Dry Valleys B) East
Antarctica C) The Antarctic Peninsula
74
What Is the Likely Future Climate For the
McMurdo Dry Valleys?
  • Observed
  • Sustained periods of warming and cooling
  • Pulse of meltwater during warming events
  • Significant hydrological and ecological responses
  • Predicted
  • Sustained periods of warming?
  • Increased frequency of melt?

75
To sum it up
  • Unique communities-dominated by microbes
  • Many endemic species
  • Perfectly adapted
  • One of the most diverse bacterial communities on
    Earth
  • Predicted climate change will affect ecosystem
    and diversity

76
Polar Trec
PolarTREC (Teachers and Researchers Exploring and
Collaborating in the Arctic and Antarctic) is a
program funded by the National Science Foundation
in which K-12 teachers participate in polar
research, working closely with scientists as a
pathway to improving science education.
  • To learn more about Polar Trec go to
  • http//www.polartrec.com/

77
Acknowledgements
Dr. Cristina VesbachUniv. of New
Mexico cvesbach_at_unm.edu
  • Susan Kelly
  • National Science Foundation
  • MCMLTER
  • Snow project
  • Hydrologic Margins project
  • For more info
  • mcmlter.org
  • water.engr.psu.edu/antsnow/

Dr. Michael Gooseff Penn State Univ. mng2_at_psu.edu
Dr. Jeb Barrett Virginia Tech jebarre_at_vt.edu
78
Thank you to the sponsor of tonight's Web Seminar
79
http//learningcenter.nsta.org
80
http//www.elluminate.com
81
National Science Teachers Association Dr. Francis
Q. Eberle, Executive Director Zipporah Miller,
Associate Executive Director Conferences and
Programs Al Byers, Assistant Executive Director
e-Learning
NSTA Web Seminars Paul Tingler, Director Jeff
Layman, Technical Coordinator
LIVE INTERACTIVE LEARNING _at_ YOUR DESKTOP
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