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Ice‐Covered Lakes of Tibetan Plateau as Solar Heat Collectors

Georgiy Kirillin, Tom Shatwell, Lijuan Wen

2021Geophysical Research Letters80 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The Qinghai‐Tibet Plateau possesses the largest alpine lake system, which plays a crucial role in the land‐atmosphere interaction. We report first observations on the thermal and radiation regime under ice of the largest freshwater lake of the Plateau. The results reveal that freshwater lakes on the Tibetan Plateau fully mix under ice. Due to strong solar heating, water temperatures increase above the maximum density value 1–2 months before the ice break, forming stable thermal stratification with subsurface temperatures >6°C. The resulting heat flow from water to ice makes a crucial contribution to ice cover melt. After the ice breakup, the accumulated heat is released into the atmosphere during 1–2 days, increasing lake‐atmosphere heat fluxes up to 500 W m −2 . The direct biogeochemical consequences of the deep convective mixing are aeration of the deep lake waters and upward supply of nutrients to the upper photic layer.

Topics & Concepts

Plateau (mathematics)Atmosphere (unit)Environmental scienceBiogeochemical cycleAtmospheric sciencesGeologyHydrology (agriculture)ClimatologyMeteorologyMathematicsChemistryMathematical analysisEnvironmental chemistryGeotechnical engineeringPhysicsArctic and Antarctic ice dynamicsClimate change and permafrostCryospheric studies and observations
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