Martin Briggs

and 5 more

Assessment and management of limited fresh groundwater resources on remote small islands can be complicated by heterogenous geology, natural climate cycles, and a general lack of data. The Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge is home to one of the few surviving native stands of Pisonia grandis in the central Pacific Ocean, yet these trees face pressure from groundwater salinization, with limited basic groundwater data to guide decision making. Adding to natural complexity, the geology of Palmyra was heavily altered by dredge and fill activities in the 1940s. We combined electromagnetic imaging (EMI) and hydrological field measurements from 2008-2019 with groundwater modeling to map the current distribution of fresh groundwater on the modified main island and a small, more natural islet to better understand potential physical drivers of spatiotemporal variability. Frequency-domain EMI data were collected on the main atoll islands over repeat transects in 2008 following ‘strong’ La Niña conditions (wet) and 2016 during ‘very strong’ El Niño conditions (dry). Shallow monitoring wells were installed adjacent to the geophysical transects in 2013 and screened within the fresh/saline groundwater transition zone. Temporal EMI and monitoring well data showed a strong lateral and vertical contraction of the freshwater lens in response to El Niño conditions, and transient EMI data indicated a thicker lens toward the ocean side, an opposite spatial pattern to that observed for many other Pacific islands. On an outer islet where a stand of mature Pisonia trees exist, EMI surveys revealed only a thin (<3 m from land surface) layer of brackish groundwater during El Niño. Numerical groundwater simulations were performed for a range of permeability distributions and climate conditions at Palmyra. Results revealed that the observed atypical lens asymmetry is likely due to a combination of lagoon dredging and filling with high-permeability material, allowing for more efficient submarine groundwater discharge on the lagoon side. Simulations also predict large negative changes (approximately 40% decrease) in freshwater lens volume during dry cycles and highlight threats to the Pisonia trees, yielding insight for atoll ecosystem management on Palmyra and other small Pacific islands.

Jessica Ng

and 6 more

Estimates of climate sensitivity rely in part on the magnitude of global cooling during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). While ice cores provide reliable LGM temperatures in high-latitude regions, proxy records of sea-surface temperature (SST) disagree substantially in the low latitudes (1-3), and quantitative low-elevation paleotemperature records on land are scarce. Filling this gap, noble gases in groundwater record land surface temperatures via their temperature-dependent solubility in water (4), a direct physical relationship uncomplicated by biological and chemical processes (5-6). Individual groundwater noble gas studies (e.g. 7-8) have shown 5-7 °C LGM cooling, in line with some proxy data (e.g. tropical snowline reconstructions) but larger than notable low-latitude SST reconstructions considering land-sea cooling ratios. To date, limited spatial coverage and the use of different physical frameworks to determine temperature from noble gas data has prevented a comprehensive estimate of low-latitude LGM cooling from noble gases in groundwater. Here we compile four decades of groundwater noble gas data from six continents, all interpreted using a consistent physical framework (9). We evaluate the accuracy of the “noble gas paleothermometer” by comparing noble gas derived temperatures in late Holocene groundwater with modern observations. From LGM noble gas data, we find that the low-elevation, low-to-mid-latitude land surface cooled by 5.8 ± 0.6 °C during the LGM (9). The ratio of our land cooling estimate to a recent SST reconstruction (1) that found 4.0 °C cooling over the same low latitude band is consistent with the inter-model mean land-sea cooling ratio of 1.45 °C from PMIP4 simulations (10). Together, these recent land- and sea-surface LGM temperature reconstructions indicate greater low-latitude cooling and thus climate sensitivity than prior studies, with implications for projections of future climate. 1) Tierney et al. (2020). Nature. 2) CLIMAP Project Members (1976). Science. 3) MARGO Project Members (2009). Nat. Geosci. 4) Jenkins et al. (2019). Mar. Chem. 5) Aeschbach et al. (2000). Nature. 6) Kipfer et al. (2002). Rev. Mineral. Geochem. 7) Stute et al. (1995). Science. 8) Weyhenmeyer et al. (2000). Science. 9) Seltzer et al. (2021). Nature. 10) Kageyama et al. (2021). Clim. Past.