Introduction
Temperate ice is a complicated material consisting of a solid and a liquid phase in thermo-dynamic equilibrium and whose chemical properties evolve with time. According to Glen and others (in press), recrystallization phenomena assist the migration of impurities to grain boundaries and then these impurities are progressively eliminated from the glacier along the veins within the ice.
Chemical studies of temperate ice have mainly hitherto been conducted in the course of dating experiments using radioactive isotopes, and there exist few results on the behaviour of ions and solid particles although these in fact determine the radioactivity measurements mentioned above.
The study of chemical processes within a glacier has nevertheless been undertaken by Reference GorhamGorham (1958) with his analysis of variations in the chemical composition of ice on a crevasse wall from the surface to 14 m. This author does not observe any systematic reduction with depth in the concentration of Na, K, Mg, Ca, HCO3, Cl, SO4 and thus no leaching. He attributes the concentration variations, which are in the same sense for all the ions, to changes in the structure and density of ice and hence to climatic variations. Measurements of radioactivity made by Reference Picciotto, Picciotto, Crozaz, Ambach and EisnerPicciotto and others (1967) on firn and ice samples from Kesselwandferner (Austria) have also given some information on the behaviour of strontium and lead. 90% of the '°Sr present in precipitation had been leached from the firn and had not been reabsorbed in the underlying ice. 210Pb on the other hand was displaced neither in the firn nor the ice where measurements of its activity therefore allowed a valuable means of dating, at least for the recent ice on which these observations were made. The difference in behaviour between strontium and lead is partly explained by their different chemical properties. According to Reference Ambach, Ambach, Eisner, Prantl and SlupetzkyAmbach and others (1969) the displacement of solid matter will be slight in the firn, causing a weak leaching of total ß activity connected with absorption on these materials.
By detailed chemical study of an ice cliff of the Glacier du Mont de Lans, situated at an altitude of 3 200 m a.s.l. near the equilibrium line, I have tried to obtain new data for this research on chemical mechanisms in ice in the neighbourhood of 0°C.
Sample Collection and Analysis
The Glacier du Mont de Lans, where the samples were collected, is situated in the Massif de l'Oisans Pelvoux. It has been described by Reference Vivian and VolleVivian and Volle (1970) as a real glacier cupola, with a convex transverse profile which sends tongues radiating in all directions. The areas of overhanging rock walls is negligible, which results in a very small accumulation of surface debris. Together with the Glacier de la Girose it makes up the most westerly glacial group of the massif. Partly because of its orientation and partly because of its high elevation (80% of its surface area occurs above the equilibrium line which is at 3 000 m a.s.l. in this massif) it enjoys a good snow accumulation from westerly winds responsible for snowfalls which build up to 3 to 4 m each year.
The western tongue of the glacier, or Jandri tongue, has been chosen as the place for sampling because of its rapid accessibility by télécabines. The sampling was done at the end of September 1975 in a transverse crevasse situated up-glacier from a relatively crevassed zone corresponding to a slight break of slope of the glacier and about 500 m from the snout. This crevasse was some 20 m long and 8 m in average depth including an uphill vertical wall on which the sampling was done and a downhill subvertical wall with knobs of refrozen ice. Below the top 5 cm, corresponding to a recent snowfall, the wall consisted of ice. Black layers rich in solid matter regularly spaced every 30 cm marked the cliff to a depth of 2 m. These layers presumably correspond to the spring melt period and seem therefore to mark the annual layers. Below 2 m the stratification was no longer visible, which poses the question as to why it disappears so suddenly.
The samples were taken using an instrument of the hammer ice-axe type in large blocks so as to reduce as much as possible the contact points between the instrument and the sample which was then immediately placed in a polyethylene bag. Thirty-eight samples were obtained in this manner every 30 cm to 2 m and then every 20 cm to 6.5 m. It is estimated that they represent at least some twenty years of accumulation. They were transported in solid form to the laboratory, where they were kept at — 10°C until they were wanted for analysis.
Solid matter, extracted by filtering (lie water through 0.3 μm mihpore fillers, was weighed, observed with binocular and polarizing microscopes, and analysed chemically. The Na, K and Mg content of the filtered waters was determined by atomic flame absorption by spectro-photometry after preliminary concentration (by a factor 16) on ion-exchange resins (Reference BouardRicq-de Bouard, 1976). Ca was determined directly after filtration.
Results
Insoluble elements
The amount of matter suspended in the ice is very significant between 5 and 30 cm (310 mg/1), then it decreases markedly while showing variations (Fig. 1). Down to 2.10 m it is localized in the clearly visible strata, as has been described above. Below 2.10 m it varied from 5 to 20 mg/1 and is relatively uniformly distributed throughout the ice, with, however, a well defined maximum between 5.30 and 5.70 m (40-45 mg/1), a maximum which does not correspond in any clear way with an increase in the major cations in solution.
The horizon between 2.00 and 2.10 m, particularly rich in matter in suspension and in solution, marks the boundary between the stratified zone above and the unstratified zone below. We shall see below that these two zones are differentiated not only by the quantity and distribution of solid matter but equally by the behaviour of their sodium and potassium content in solution.
The solid deposits present in the ice are fines, below 50 μm. Their colour allows their classification into two groups. The first are dark grey (10Y/R4 in the Munsell Soil Color Charts, Munsell Color Company Inc., Baltimore. Maryland 21218, U.S.A.), the others grey brown (10 Y/R 4/2 in the Munsell Soil Color Charts). From the chemical point of view they are principally distinguished by their loss at 1 000°C and their Fe2O3 content (Table I).
Few of the minerals were identifiable in the polarizing microscope because of their size. Nevertheless it was possible to note the presence of several hornblendes in the 10 Y/R 4 and of anatases in the 10 Y/R 4/2 deposit. This latter mineral is very resistant and is generally found to be concentrated in ancient sands which have undergone many reworkings, whereas hornblende is an Alpine mineral which is peculiarly abundant in all deposits coming from the inner zone of the Alps. Despite the limited number of these results as regards the number of observations made we can consider that the 10 Y/R 4 deposits consist of local material, while the 10 Y/R 4/2 deposits, richer in Fe2O3 and containing anatase, come from a mixture of local material and red sand of Saharan origin frequently observed in the Alps (Reference Clément, Clément, Ricq[–de Bouard] and ThomasClément and others, 1972). The 10 Y/R 4/2 deposits are present in strata from 0.50 to 0.80 m, 0.80 to 1.10 m and 4.10 to 4.50 m. The analysis of solid deposits present in the ice thus appears as a method of identification, and perhaps eventually of dating, of certain horizons, if it is possible to relate a type of deposit to an historical event.
Major elements in solution
Apart from the layer from 1.50 to 2.00 m, calcium is always the dominant element, which indicates a terrestrial origin for most of the soluble impurities (Fig. 2), A comparison between the concentrations of cations in the different horizons analysed has shown that there exists a linear correlation between Na and K, and between Ca and Mg, the linear equation being
with a correlation coefficient of 0.93 for 26 specimens, and
with a correlation coefficient of 0.92 for 28 specimens.
Certain specimens are significantly divergent from this trend, and these have not been taken into account in computing the linear coefficients. This occurs for Na in the two samples between 1.10 and 2.00 m, a very special horizon as far as sodium is concerned as we shall see below, and for Ca in the samples between 1.10 and 1.45 m and between 3.50 and 3.70 m. These correlations indicate identical behaviour of the two alkalis and of the two alkaline earths and, if not an identity of origin, at least a simultaneity of deposit of Na with K and Ca with Mg.
The linear correlation coefficients between the other cations are very weak (Table II).
The concentration variations of Na and K. on the one hand and of Ca and Mg on the other do not always occur in the same sense, that is to say the maxima and minima of concentration do not coincide for the four cations (Fig. a). However the clearest result which emerges from the data on Figure 2 is the general tendency for concentrations to decrease from the surface to the base of the profile indicating a leaching of ions. I have tried to quantify this tendency. A semi-logarithmic plot of concentration variations of the different elements with depth (Figs 3-4) indicates to a first approximation a linear decrease of these elements, from the surface to the base of the profile for Ca and Mg and from 2.10 m to the base of the profile for Na and K. The leaching therefore obeys a law of the form
where c is the concentration at depth H, c0 the initial surface concentration and the leaching constant equal to log 2/H½ where H½ is the depth at which c = ½0. More directly δc in a given horizon is proportional to the concentration present, δc = — λeδH. Values of H½ and λ are different for the four cations analysed as shown in Table III.
According to these values the order of increasing leaching is Ca, Mg, Na, K. Note that the alkaline earths are less rapidly leached than the alkalis. Although the leaching rate of K is greater than that of Na, while that of Mg is greater than that of Ca, we have found a good correlation between K and Na and between Mg and Ca. At first sight this seems contradictory, but it can be explained by the fact that the profile analysed is not very deep and that therefore the deviations related to differences in behaviour of the cations arc not very important. The exponential law for concentration decrease with depth (and therefore time) is really only a first approximation. The linear correlation coefficients of the logarithms of concentration are only 0.67 for Na, 0.80 for K, 0.76 for Mg, and 0.55 for Ca. These relatively low values, particularly in the case of Ca, are due to the fact that the initial concentrations c 0 for each horizon was not constant as is assumed in the theory, but underwent annual variations connected with the origin (marine or continental) of the precipitation as well as with general environmental conditions. Furthermore, in the analysis of variation of concentration with depth we have only considered the leaching process. However according to a previous study (Ricq-de Bouard and Thomas, in press) we have been able to show that, before the leaching stage there is a phase of sodium enrichment of a deep horizon in the snow cover. We have attributed to this phenomena the structure of that horizon, which allows us to capture the sodium coming from liquid precipitation. Similar processes seem able to explain the high sodium content observed between 0.90 and 2.00 m.
Conclusion
This study of the distribution of major cations in ice shows clearly that the chemical properties of temperate ice are essentially conditioned by a leaching processFootnote * which removes the chemical constituents occurring in the original precipitation. As opposed to what occurs in cold ice, no chemical stratification exists in temperate ice at least as regards the major cations. This statement counsels prudence in dating attempts on such ice using stable or radioactive, natural or artificial isotopes. Nevertheless we have seen that the leaching rates seem to depend on the chemical properties of the cations. They could therefore probably be very small or zero for certain elements.
As far as the distribution and concentration of solid deposits is concerned, the observations made pose the question of the significance of ihe stratification visible in the ice. We have observed, in effect, an alternation of layers of ice poor and rich in suspended particles from the surface to 2 m, then a sudden disappearance of all visible stratification.
The explanation of this phenomenon as due to an important change as a function of time and place of formation of the ice in the deposition of debris seems completely excluded when we can consider the topography of the glacier and the rarity of overhanging rock surfaces. The hypothesis of the leaching of these deposits is not satisfactory either; it does not explain the suddenness of the change from the upper zone down to 2 m to the zone below. By contrast a third hypothesis in terms of variations of regime of the glacier makes the observed phenomena coherent. Three types of situation could have occurred: (i) accumulation is always greater than ablation, (ii) accumulation is sometimes greater and sometimes less than ablation, (iii) accumulation is always less than ablation.
In the first type of situation two consecutive dark horizons correspond to two consecutive spring periods and measuring the interval between these two horizons gives a value of the annual accumulation. If the rates of debris accretion and accumulation are constant, the dark layers will occur at regular intervals and their content of suspended matter will be similar. In the third type of situation the solid matter in a single dark horizon can come from several consecutive summers. It then becomes impossible to relate the stratigraphy visible to the eye to a chronology. One can however still draw from the amount of debris contained in each horizon conclusions concerning the value of the ablation: a band particularly rich indicating the concentration of deposits from many years in a single horizon, and thus a considerable ablation (assuming, let us recall, a constant accretion of debris, which seems justified in the zone in question). The second type of situation, which appears in the neighbourhood of the equilibrium line, leads to a stratification which may or may not correspond to an annual stratification without our being able to decide which.
According to this hypothesis on the variation of glacier regime we can postulate that the bottom of the profile analysed, from 6.50 to 2.00 m, consists of ice formed above the equilibrium line; the stratification not being visible in this zone because the annual accretion of debris is small. By contrast the ice between a.00 m and the surface is formed in the neighbourhood of the equilibrium line or in the ablation zone. The concentration by ablation of the solid matter from several years allows a stratification to appear which ought not to be interpreted as resulting from an annual phenomenon. The high concentration of suspended matter between 5 and 30 cm corresponds to the importance of the ablation in recent years; an importance related to its position just below the equilibrium line rather than to any recent increase in the solid deposition at the glacier surface.
Acknowledgements
I would like to express my sincere thanks to S. Peguy and H. Cortot who collected the ice specimens and whose collaboration has been indispensible for the success of this work.